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#223302 - 12/25/07 05:30 PM
Re: Deciding on an arranger, really need help with regards to key feel?
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Junior Member
Registered: 01/28/07
Posts: 19
Loc: Staffordshire, England
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Hi Paul, you've answered my questions exactly thank you When I said PA1X I did mean the pro yes, not the 61 key PA1X. The keybed you're describing is exactly what I was asking about. The Fatar bed from the Karma,PA80,Triton LE,N364 etc, the one I really hate lol. I was really hoping it would have the Triton/Triton Extreme keys which are very similar to the Tyros 2. I asked around and apparently the PA2X has got the same keybed as the PA1X pro, this is the one for me i'm sure. Many thanks again for all replies to my spamming, and thank you Paul for finally clarifying things for me once and for all
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#223304 - 12/26/07 07:15 AM
Re: Deciding on an arranger, really need help with regards to key feel?
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Junior Member
Registered: 01/28/07
Posts: 19
Loc: Staffordshire, England
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For me personally Tom, I can play fine on any keys, obviously piano needs a more weighty feel though to be expressive. My issue is one of quality, over the years i've had a few Korg synths with the cheaper Fatar bed, and random keys either stop responding or get stuck at 100% velocity. When you are paying £1500+ for an instrument (which takes a lot of saving) you expect proper quality, otherwise you might as well make do with a £300 PSR. I wish Korg and especially Yamaha would realise this, and make a quality keybed a priority in their medium/high end range. I would never buy a PSR-S900 purely for this reason, although I think it's a fantastic board otherwise. I am probably just showing my age, I remember when everything was made to last, and a synth was built like a tank lol.
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#223305 - 12/26/07 02:18 PM
Re: Deciding on an arranger, really need help with regards to key feel?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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Lightness, once it is better than PSR, is not too much of a problem to compensate for. But key SHAPE and lack of 'wobble' or bounce CAN make quite a difference to your playing.
Shape makes a big difference in that some synth keybeds have smallish black keys compared to a piano, some even have shorter white keys too... Shape also effects ease of doing smears and glisses if you play a lot of organ style. Keys with sharp corners and edges, and piano shaped white keys, with the little overhang that real piano keys have, can make palm smears much more difficult, your hand can get caught up on the corners.
And then lack of 'wobble' or any sideways play in the key really effects these smear tactics (!), and gives a clue to quality of construction, and likeliness of durability problems.
Finally, key 'bounce', or the tendency to repeat a note if the note is 'flicked' (such as a grace note) can be a problem. Many makers forget the key needs damping well at the TOP of the travel as well as the bottom!
If your skill level is high enough, all of these things CAN make a difference in how well you can actually play. Sure, you CAN sit down at just about anything with black and white so-called 'keys', and bang out a tune. But don't let anyone persuade you that it makes NO difference. For the better players, or those aspiring to improve, don't discount how well the action works as a factor in how well you can play... Ask any pianist, and the action, and how well it is regulated in a piano, is JUST as important as how in tune it is..!
Why should WE have any lower standards? You don't actually PLAY an arranger. You play it's KEYBED. It is where the 'rubber meets the road'. Don't dismiss it's importance...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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