![]() ![]() Regarding presets, there’s a huge inspiration preset menu to start you off with names like Leslie Waves, Meteor Showers and Dark Pendulum. It’s not really a piano instrument, it’s much more than that - so starting with a preset and tweaking from there might just be the way you explore Piano Colors. It’s in this particles section that you can morph your sound far beyond where you started. ![]() There’s Octave Ranges Low and High and Tonal Shift Low and High, and an FX section. It has an excellent display where it looks like sound bubbles glistening and floating away just like you hear it. ![]() The Particles is where you expand your sound, adding ‘particles’ to your part. The Arpeggiator and Particles sections are where the playground starts, in fact, you have an arpeggiator preset menu to dive into and try something out you might never have thought of before. Even playing some basic chords (I-IV-V) became a beast of their own, as sound lingered well after the initial strike. ![]() Speaking of making music, first opening up Piano Colors gave me that perfect dichotomy of a piano and a synthetic soundscape. ![]()
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