Originally posted by: UncleWai
It's not the equipments; it's the recording. Piano recordings always blow, unless someone can recommend me some.
Again, from your point of view they always blow because you're listening to them on a device that makes them do so.
It's common sense really, if ALL piano pieces sound bad, does it make more sense to assume ALL piano pieces are recorded improperly or it's your one sound system that's at fault?
A piano is difficult to reproduce properly, that's the problem. There is no specific piano recordings I could recommend, there are far more good ones out there than there are bad, any solo piano album will do just fine as a demonstration.
Rather than looking around for that one great sounding piano piece you will probably never find, I'd suggest to take the recordings you already have and bring them to a quality audio store and sample a few systems, you might be surprised.
Keep in mind that yes I know exactly what you're talking about when you say they sound bad, and I know why this is. I've compared the same music on several different systems ranging from multimedia to electrostatic and I've never come upon an instrument that has a more significant change in sound from system to system. If there's one instrument you want to compare the quality of sound equipment, the piano would be it.