|
|
|
|
|
|
#143868 - 09/24/02 07:43 AM
Re: Korg pa60 or Yamaha psr2000?
|
Senior Member
Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
|
The voice of dissent here.. lol. I played both in live situations and once I got to know the OS of the PA80 ( identical to the 60 ), I found it to be easier to navigate in real time than the PSR2000. Yes the 2000 is simpler to learn. It has less going on in there. The 2000 also has the flimsiest key feel of any board I've ever tried.
Not bashing the 2000 here, although mine came chock full of OS bugs ( not the norm from what other players have said here ). I got frustrated and gave up on it after a two month fiasco that saw my board away in a shop with no solution in sight, but the bottom line was that I got reacquainted with my PA80 and found it to be the better board ( for me ) to play live with, or else I'd have toughed it out and waited for a new 2000.
Best bet is to try them both out yourself, undertanding that the 2000 is without a doubt easier to play "out of the box". To get the most from the PA80, I had to spend a good bit of time setting it up so that it is user friendly " on the fly ". The good news was that it has the flexibility so that I could set it up pretty much as I want, including replacing internal styles that I'll never use.
For the type of music you want to play, either will work fine Tiger. The PA60 does only have 2 fills per style ( my chief complaint with the PA series ), but I think overall, Korg still has the better sounding ( more realistic ) styles. Maybe that will change with Tyros.. we'll see. Ironically, this is almost a strike against the PA80 or 60 for me during live play, because the styles are so full that I find myself turning parts off so that I can add something meaningful with my own play.
AJ
_________________________
AJ
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|