|
|
|
|
|
|
#146602 - 05/14/06 05:51 AM
Re: How important is the weight of a instrument
|
Member
Registered: 05/08/06
Posts: 464
Loc: Southeastern PA, USA
|
I have a love/hate relationship with the weight of my Roland FP5. It is a weighted key, 88-key instrument. I am a classically trained pianist and a gigging jazz musician. I love the feel of playing with the instrument. It affords me the opportunity to explore a wide range of expression in my playing. I hate lugging it around. On a gig, add to that a stand, amplification, cable/stuff bag and the hate just grows. Some people may say a cart is the solution. That helps if the gig is handicap-accessable all the way to the stage. If not, your language gets very colorful as you unload/reload the cart to get passed steps.
I use the softcase for the Yamaha S80 with this keyboard. It fits the Roland perfectly, has wheels and a strap. I can strap it to my back and wheel it and move it around hands-free. That part is easy. Lifting it in/out car and on/off stand at home and the stand at the gig is a little less fun. There has been plenty of times the keyboard sat in the case and not on my stand at home because I didn't feel like dealing with it or knew I had another gig coming up soon and would just have to pack it up again.
For the future I am looking at 61 keys for the main keyboard with a 2nd 88 key controller that I will use when needed. For me, in the perfect world, Yamaha comes out with a 76 key arranger. If I only played the keyboard at home, or took it out only on a very rare occasion, I wouldn't care about weight. Otherwise, it is of high priority.
[This message has been edited by RobertG (edited 05-14-2006).]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#146606 - 05/14/06 07:54 AM
Re: How important is the weight of a instrument
|
Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
|
I've spent too many years in envy of fellow band members able to simply carry (in one hand) their music instrument to/from rehearsals & gigs, while I had to struggle carting around my 70+ lb keyboard, suffering back aches along the way to go back to that. Now that my keyboard transport weight is finally begining to inch in the direction of my non-keyboard gigging musician brothers and sisters, (Tyros2: 32 lbs) no longer am I willing to transport a keyboard over 40 lbs. Considering the fact that a keyboard's appropriately protective case can easily weigh 20+ lbs, a 49.6 lb keyboard like the Roland E80 with appropriate case will weigh 70+ lbs. In addition to weight, the keyboards dimensions (length/width & depth), bulkiness, and balance ergonomics, are other critically important transport factors to consider. It's far more difficult to manuever a 76 or 88 note long keyboard than a shorter 61 note one, and if the majority of the keyboard's weight rests on one end only, this makes it more difficult to manuever still. Balancing keyboard sound quality, with transport weight and size (61 vs 76-88 keys) are important considerations for the gigging musician. - Scott
_________________________
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|