I raised this question at a few other sites, as well. I'm interested in what the classical music community thinks:
Now that Bos/Yamaha and Steinway have perfected the MIDI-piano (modern equivalent to the old player piano), why aren't these used in making and producing solo piano recordings?
I've read that even classical music performances routinely involve quite a lot of splicing together of short sections of a longer piece.
So wouldn't that sort of thing be made much easier, and much more precise, at least in the context of solo-piano performances, with a MIDI record of the performance?
Inotherwords, instead of performing at a regular Steinway or Bos or CFX (etc.), the pianist performs at a MIDI-rigged Steinway or Bos or Yamaha CFX. Then the MIDI record of that performance is edited and the performance spat out (replayed) by the MIDI-equipped instrument while being recorded again in the studio. No pianist, this time, of course; because the MIDI-piano player is providing the "performance" in front of the microphones, etc., In fact, we don't want the pianist playing, not only because he/she might make a mistake, but more important, because the pianist thought the first take was really good, perhaps a "once-in-a-lifetime" performance. We've preserved that performance, but can now re-record it with the desired corrections.
The pianist would, under this scenario, still listen to the end-product through loudspeakers or headphones, as usual, and make assessments, which I'm guessing is what normally happens in the studio. But any necessary changes to the performance would, as before, be made by MIDI-editing, as opposed to wave file splicing and re-takes of relevant sections, etc... Of course, re-takes by the pianist could be done, too. They're not necessarily ruled out. But those retakes would also become part of the "MIDI-record," so to speak, and if they are used, they are spliced in, not using audio splicing, but using MIDI-editing.
(Putative) Advantages:
1) If the pianist and engineer really liked a specific take, but just one or two notes got out of tune, the take would not be lost. Rather, the offending notes could be retuned and the MIDI-piano could spit out exactly the same once-in-a-lifetime performance for the recording microphones, now with the out-of-tune note corrected.
2) Alternative microphone placements can be tested and the results recorded, without losing a superior or "once-in-a-lifetime" take.
3) The recording process could, conceivably, end up being faster and cheaper than the old approach which, I think, consists of doing multiple takes and a lot of splicing.
(Putative) Disadvantages:
1) Midi-pianos don't in fact spit out exactly what is fed into them. The technology has not advanced that far.
2) 127 velocity layers is not enough. (I know, the best MIDI machines work in increments of, I think, over one thousand velocity layers. So there's the counter-argument.)
3) Midi-editing takes the life out of the music.
4) Your not hearing the pianist, really; once you MIDI-edit his/her performance your listening to a MIDI-editor.
5) The pianos are too expensive.
There are other arguments and considerations. But, on the face of it, I tend to think the arguments FOR are stronger than the arguments AGAINST.
Are MIDI-pianos (my terminology) being used or contemplated in the piano recording buz?