does every keyboard (piano) echo?
Answers
Answer:
The overall size of the space you produce the sound in
The number of surfaces the sound can bounce off of (how enclosed is the room, how high is the ceiling, and so on)
The material of the walls (wood, concrete, glass, or whatever), which affects how much sound they absorb and how distinct the repetitions/reflections
Mix or wet/dry mix: Mix controls how much of your original, unaffected (dry) signal is passed on and how much of the reverberated (wet) signal is introduced. Often, just a little wet signal is good enough to produce a nice, not-too-sloppy sound. But sometimes a lot more of the wet signal is nice, giving your playing a spacious quality and majestic sound.
Answer:
Reverb adds space around your notes and can make your sound seem farther away, even dreamy. It’s short for reverberation, which describes the continuation of sound in a particular space after the original sound is produced and stops or decays away. Reverb produces a kind of hazy or blurred type of echo that’s very pleasing to the ear and gives a sense of the space you’re playing in
Explanation: