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#165221 - 07/24/02 10:07 PM
Re: sd-1 or 9000pro?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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Sean, I've listened to and auditioned BOTH the SD1 and 9000pro. BOTH are great sounding instruments, but each stronger in different areas. I feel that the SD1's strength lies in its pop/dance grooves and its superb dynamic live sounding drums which work well with these styles. On the other hand, I personally prefer the brighter piano sound on the 9000pro, finding the SD1's acoustic piano a tad too dark for my taste, though still impressive. If sounds, not styles are your principal concern, I would steer you towards the 9000pro, or even getting the much cheaper PSR2000 ($1,000) with it's exceptional acoustic instrument sounds & capable (but not extraordinary) styles, and then purchasing a Synth (like the Motif) or other Synth Workstation, to gain the other features you said you were looking for (on your other post). Just my opinion. - Scott
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#165223 - 07/25/02 02:17 AM
Re: sd-1 or 9000pro?
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Member
Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 89
Loc: Sydney, Australia
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Sean, I prefer the 9000PRO, for many reasons. But then I could be biased. The honeymoon with my 9000PRO is still going strong (over a year now). Both the SD1 and 9000PRO are great instruments. Here in Australia they are about the same price before the deals. For me the polyphony 126 Vs 64 for the SD1 was a big point. Also the lay-out and the user interface of each. For me I prefer the 9000PRO's keyboard action (it is so close in weight to my piano's action).
Also, The fact that you can have three instruments layered in the right (R1,R2,R3) as well as the left(L) and be able to set three separate split points - for the accomp., left and R1/R2, and also R3 gives you a lot of flexability in performing. The sounds and the styles - this is very personal - upto the indevidual's own taste. Both instruments are soooo strong in this area unless your ear takes a definate like or dislike to either, then I would say that the sounds wont be the deciding factor. The combination of your most sought after bells and whistles will become the deciding factor.
On the styles, I nearly always end up tweaking the 9000PRO's styles. Whether its the choice of instruments or the tonal qualities of the instruments. That's another strength of the 9000PRO - the capability of the almost un-ending number of options for varying a style's sound and character. I think that is why Yamaha engineers set such a bland middle of the road setting for the styles. They know that the indevidual will want to change the mood or the sound of the style to suit what ever the occasion is.
I guess Sean if you have zeroed in on both of these instruments, my advice is to really spend a lot of time with each before making the decision. This includes spending a lot of time going through the user manuals - both are available from the respective web sites.
Also, if you can do the evaluations through the same sound system. If you can't manage the same sound system then get a really top quality pair of head-phones and use them. I used this technique and I believe it paid the dividend. I spent a lot of time on the 9000PRO before I finally bought one. Lots of luck Sean. Try not to become impatient during your evaluation trials - enjoy the experiance! Jon.
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#165225 - 07/25/02 04:35 AM
Re: sd-1 or 9000pro?
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/24/99
Posts: 3305
Loc: Reseda, California USA
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Wow, I don't even know where to begin. Comparing a Motif to a 9000pro is like comparing two different things at two ends of the spectrums. The common ground here is that both are top quality performers in their own fields. The Motif is not an arranger keyboard and the 9000 pro is and that's the main difference. The 9000pro does not sound like the Motif or work like a Motif in it's recording mode. Yes, there are a few of the "sweet" sounds taken from the 9000 and put into the Motif, but that's the end of their similarity. Motif's sampler lets you sample (sing or play an instrument) along with a song and record it as a track in "real" time. Motif's sampler lets you slice and dice your samples and do extensive editing to your samples. 9000 pro can't do many of the sampling features Motif can do. Motif has a total of sixteen, 16 track sequencers to record songs in and then put these sixteen together and create a song. Motif has an entirly more sophisticated editing mode for making and editing sounds. Motif is an incredible keyboard, but,,,,,it is not an ARRANGER, specializing in style auto accomp. playback which the 9000 pro does. If you are thinking one of these will do both, I think you will have to get both! These are very different products with different purposes in mind. Of course both can play sounds, both can record songs and both can sample.....Just differently. I generally find my Motif customer is not my 9000Pro customer, but not always. Sometimes I'm wrong, though hard to admit! George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene Reseda, California
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George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene (Closed after 51 years) West Hills, California (Retired 2021)
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#165226 - 07/25/02 09:36 PM
Re: sd-1 or 9000pro?
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Member
Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 89
Loc: Sydney, Australia
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Hi Sean, George is right in what he says. If performing and song writing is your goal, then the answer to your question is both yes and no. It depends upon how you want to get there (and by this I mean how much time and effort you wish to contribute). Let me try to explain ....
When I arrived at the decision to buy my first keyboard (not the 9000PRO) I had to go up a very steep learning curve to understand (appreciate) the differences in the many types of keyboards available. All this was done before I knew about this wonderful group of people at SynthZone. Through my many questions, and I really think that at the time I taxed to the limit the patience of some of the store people I asked, I zereod in that I needed either an arranger keyboard (Yamaha PSR or Roland ) or a Synth (Roland or Yamaha S80) and not an "electric piano". My biggest problem at the time was getting the information in a form that I could understand (relate to). Many of the stores people new what I was asking but could not answer it in simple man's terms. They did not ask the obvious questions - "what do you want to use it for?" and "what do you think it will do for you?"
The bottom line was that if I wanted to put together arrangements of songs quickly to use immediately, then an arranger keyboard was my choice. If on the other hand I wanted to mainly work with a band and contribute all the sounds and effects that these instruments can, and as a side operation "take time" to craft and "write songs" using the syth's tools which work from the ground up, rather than quickly write using the styles (arrangements) of an arranger keyboard, then the synth was for me.
I chose the arranger because, yes I wanted to "write songs" but more over I was not continuously working with a band - mostly there was just me - so I needed the flexability of being able to quickly bring songs together through arranging rather than working on them from the ground up (which is what I would have had to do with a synth).
I realise that I have not answered your question via a definative feature / advantage comparison of the two instruments. I think that if you downloaded the manuals for both, after a few hours of study you would be far clearer on the issues than reading any amount of rambling I could do in this post.
However if you decide at a high level, along the lines that I have outlinned, to determine what YOU want to do with the instrument and what you want IT to do for you, then I think you will have your answer as to which would work best for you. I hope that this helps. Jon.
[This message has been edited by JonPro (edited 07-25-2002).]
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