Yamaha Grand Piano disappeared from instrument menu

• Apr 10, 2018 - 10:35

I downloaded the MuseScore 2.0.3 update today, but it turns out that the "Yamaha Grand Piano" option has disappeared from the Instruments menu. I removed the program and downloaded the 2.1 I had previously but the Yamaha Grand is still not there. Could you help me please?


Comments

The name of the sound as shown in View/Mixer is stored inside the SoundFont you're using, so which one is it? Check in View/Synthesizer/Fluid

BTW: The current version of MuseScore is 2.2.1 nowadays, and indeed in the SoundFont this version comes with removed the brand name "Yamaha" from the name of that sound

In reply to by Shoichi

Yes, my previous (and the one I re-installed today) version is 2.2.1, I made a mistake there. I'm confused with these SoundFonts. The point is that the "Grand Piano" sound I have now (in 2.2.1) is vastly inferior to the one I had earlier today in my 2.2.1. So what happened was that I got an announcement in MuseScore for an update and I thought the 2.0.3 was the new stable one, so I downloaded it. When I realised my mistake (by the "Grand Piano" sound) I removed that version and re-installed 2.2.1, but now the uppermost sound is still "Grand Piano" with awful sound instead of the previous "Yamaha Concert Grand".

In reply to by vuorila

As said, MuseScore_General.sf2 removed the brand name from that sound
Renamed presets to remove brand names ("Yamaha", "Rhodes").

but it also replaced some sounds
Grand Piano (also Bright Grand, Mellow Grand and Honky-Tonk) -- New, high-quality pianos based on the public domain "Splendid Grand" samples. These samples were originally created by AKAI for the AKAI S5000 sampler...The original close-mic sample set contained 250 MB of samples, but I have been able to program a very expressive instrument using only 94 MB of the samples. I also used the same sample-shifting technique as Roland to create "bright" and "mellow" versions of the pianos that actually have a different tonality to them rather than just using filter variance as the old pianos did. This same technique allowed me to create a honky-tonk piano that sounds somewhat legit, with none of the flanging effect that is typically heard on such presets. This allows all four pianos to sound unique while still sharing the same 94 MB sample set.

See also https://musescore.org/en/node/269869

You can still get the old sound (and name) by loading the old SoundFont, FluidR3mono_GM.sf3, see https://musescore.org/en/handbook/soundfonts-and-sfz-files#list

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

I'm sorry but I'm still a little confused... So is there any way to get the old sound back? Maybe it's just my ears (I'm a musician) but if you compare the current "Grand Piano" with the previous "Yamaha" I'm sure you can hear the difference? I don't understand why you would remove that sound from your otherwise excellent software and replace with an inferior one. I want to emphasize that otherwise I love your program, it's hard to believe you can get such a wonderful program for free!

In reply to by Shoichi

I'm sorry to such a nuisance, please be patient with me. I downloaded the FluidR3Mono GM.sf3 soundfont but the Grand Piano there is still not the same as earlier today. Could it be that there is something wrong with my computer? I just don't understand. I even removed MS2.1 and re-installed it once again, checked that the soundfont was the one above, but nothing seems to work.

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

I vaguely remember having heard something about them when I first installed MS last summer, but I've forgotten what it was. This is the first time I'm using notation software so I don't know very much about them. But I've been very happy with MS thus far. Could you offer any suggestions as to what I should try next?

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