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#181733 - 09/30/03 08:02 AM
Re: PSR-2100 very good O/S
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
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Good points all around. Yes, the music itself is the most important thing and we all know that the vast majority of the audience doesn't know and / or couldn't care less if we are playing the Tyros, 2100, Genesys, Korg, etc.. and the digital recorders I use don't care either.
But..... I always want good quality carpentry tools when I do carpentry, whether it be for financial gain ( business ) or for home use... Well, it isn't any different here.. I find it a little hard to imagine that Yamaha has any real musicians ever actually touching the keys on their PSr lines when they are being designed.. and I would love to know the logic the korg designer is using when he / she must know that the competition ( yamaha in particular ) makes their multipads really useful or adds four fills to their styles..
I don;t expect their ever will be a perfect keyboard.. some will have functions that others don't and I can accept that.. and I realize that the 2000 / 2100 is mid range in the Yamaha ararnger line, but c'mon guys.. decent key feel is one of the most basic things a keyboard player needs to have. The cheapy wk series from casio, at about a third of the price, has much better key feel... and like Uncle Dave, I have spent the better part of 4 decades working on kb technique, and it almost feels like I'm learning a new instrument all over again when I play the 2k. It just doesn't feel right.. But.. feature wise for the dollar, there isn't anything I see out there to compare.. so compromise I will..for now..
AJ
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AJ
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#181737 - 09/30/03 10:48 AM
Re: PSR-2100 very good O/S
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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Originally posted by Uncle Dave: Yeah.....sigh. No one has it right yet. ..... maybe Steinway, huh Scotty? What's 'right' is what feels best for 'you'. Funny thing is that now that I've adapted to feeling very comfortable playing the smaller feather light Yammy keys, my Steinway Grand's keys (weighing in at the other key weight/size extreme), has become the more difficult for me to play recently. Even between the different makes and models of acoustic pianos, key feel, weight and size may vary significantly. Before the portable elec keyboards revolution, pro pianists were routinely faced with the challenge of performing on pianos of widely varying keyboard action & feel. This included pianos 'out of regulation' (some keys easier to press than others), or with missing strings. The advantage we have as portable electronic keyboard musicians is not only that elec kbs don't need to be tuned, but that its feel (action) remains "consistant" from the lowest to the highest note, which is often not the case with older (out of regulation) acoustic pianos. Granted, it took a while for me to adapt my keyboard playing style to synth action boards, but I now feel pretty comfortable adapting back and forth between the Steinway's heavyily weighted & significantly larger keys to the feather light smaller Yamaha PSR keys. I've now developed the confidence to play (without too much trepidation), other keyboards out there whose key action, size/weight probably rests between these 2 extremes. Developing the ability to adapt has become the key here. Scott
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