Why does my piano recording sound bad?
A diagnosis guide for pianists recording at home · updated 7 July 2026
A piano can sound rich in the room and disappointing on playback: harsh, thin, boomy, noisy, distorted or just strangely small. That does not automatically mean the performance was bad. Most of the time, the recording chain is failing the instrument. Piano is wide, loud, percussive and resonant; a phone or badly placed mic captures only part of that picture.
The fastest way to improve the result is to identify the failure mode first. Do not add effects at random. Listen for the problem below, fix the raw take where possible, then add space only after the recording is clean enough to support it.
If it sounds harsh or metallic
The mic is probably hearing too much hammer attack and not enough soundboard. This happens when a phone is placed too close to the keys, inside the harsh part of a grand, or hard against an upright. Small rooms with bare floors and walls can make this worse because early reflections bounce straight back into the mic.
- Move the phone or mic farther from the hammers.
- Aim slightly toward the soundboard, not directly at the action noise.
- Add soft material nearby: rug, curtains, sofa, open music books on reflective surfaces.
- Play a short test with the loudest passage before recording the full piece.
If it sounds thin or tiny
This is the classic phone-mic problem. Phone microphones are designed for speech intelligibility, not the weight of a piano bass or the shimmer of the top register. They also apply automatic processing that can flatten dynamics and narrow the instrument.
- Move the mic a little farther away so it hears the whole instrument, not one local spot.
- Use a USB microphone or audio interface if you have one.
- Record in a position where the piano has room to breathe, not jammed into a corner.
- Avoid covering the phone mic with a case, hand or fabric.
If you are on Android and want to use a real mic, the USB microphone and audio-interface guide explains the cable and app-routing details.
If it sounds boomy or muddy
Too much low-mid energy can blur the notes and make pedalling sound messy. This often comes from putting the mic too close to the bass strings, placing it near a wall or corner, or recording in a small room where low frequencies pile up.
- Pull the mic away from the bass end and test a more central position.
- Move the phone away from walls, shelves and corners.
- For an upright, try recording from above with the top lid open rather than from behind the player.
- Use less pedal in the test take if the room is already adding low-frequency blur.
If it distorts on loud sections
Distortion is the one problem enhancement cannot rescue. Once the input clips, the missing waveform is gone. You may hear it as crackling, fuzz, gritty fortissimo chords or a sudden collapse when the music gets loud.
- Set levels using the loudest passage, not the opening bars.
- Leave headroom. If your recorder shows meters, peaks around -6 dB are a safer target than nearly full scale.
- Move the phone or mic farther away if the app has no manual gain control.
- Record a ten-second stress test before the full take.
If it sounds noisy
Noise is usually not mysterious. It is the room: air conditioning, fans, street rumble, lights, computer fans, pedal squeaks and chair movement. Phone processing can make steady noise more obvious because it raises quiet sections and compresses loud ones.
- Turn off fans, air conditioning and buzzing lights.
- Put the phone on something stable, not directly on a vibrating piano surface.
- Keep pets, page turns and bench movement out of the take.
- Record when outside noise is lowest.
If it sounds dry, small or emotionally flat
This is different from a bad raw recording. The take may be clean, in tune and well played, but still feel smaller than the piano did in the room. That usually means the recording is missing acoustic space: the reflections, warmth and decay that tell your ear the instrument is living in a real room or hall.
This is where reverb helps, but only after the source is usable. A good room sound can make a clean dry piano recording feel finished. A bad room sound pasted over clipping or heavy noise just makes the problems bigger.
What to fix first
Use this order:
- Distortion. Fix clipping before anything else.
- Noise. Quiet the room and stabilize the phone or mic.
- Placement. Move the mic until harshness, boom and thinness improve.
- Microphone quality. Upgrade to a USB mic or interface if the phone mic is the limit.
- Space. Add room depth and reverb once the raw take is clean.
The broader home piano recording guide covers placement, room noise and levels in more depth.
Where Piano Enhancer fits
Piano Enhancer is built for the last step: turning a dry but usable piano recording into something warmer and more finished. It keeps your original take intact, adds room depth and natural reverb around the performance, and lets you compare raw versus enhanced without moving files into a DAW.
If you are comparing tools rather than diagnosing a take, the app guide for enhancing piano recordings includes a real before-and-after and explains when a focused piano app is a better fit than a recorder or DAW.
It will not pretend a clipped or noisy take is perfect. But if your recording is clean and still sounds too dry, small or "in the room", it removes the fiddly engineering step that normally sits between a decent take and a shareable one.
Quick FAQ
Why does my piano recording sound harsh?
Usually because the microphone is too close to the hammers, the room is too reflective, the input is clipping, or the phone mic is exaggerating attack and compression.
Why does my piano recording sound muddy or boomy?
Usually because the mic is too close to the bass strings, too near a wall or corner, or in a small room where low frequencies build up.
Can reverb fix a bad piano recording?
Reverb can make a clean dry recording feel warmer and more finished, but it cannot repair clipping, heavy background noise or a badly placed microphone. Fix the raw take first, then add space.