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#244209 - 10/06/08 08:10 PM
Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/24/99
Posts: 3305
Loc: Reseda, California USA
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My first shipment finally arrived today (I used to get them first being so close to Yamaha in Buena Park, California but now they ship keyboards from Chicago). First thing is that the keyboard is very attractive and I really like that the power chord is now a regular 3 prong standard cord which can be purchased anywhere. The Tyros 2 had a chord which had special shapes and harder to replace. I also liked that the bottom of the keyboard is black and the top is silver with as stated before a much more rounded appearance than previous models. I hooked it up to a Yamaha Stagepas 500 sound system and tried the new piano... It's out of this world. There is so much more realism at both the low end and the high end. I also really like the key feel. If you look under the keys you will notice silver colored weights under each white key. I looked over the buttons to see where everything is and I immediately felt comfortable with this new model. I tried all the new superarticulation 2 sounds first and as I was talking over the phone with my friend from Cleveland Ohio Jim Palmisano, I kept going "wow". I used the articulation buttons which light green when they've been assigned to a voice to do something and then turn solid yellow if they just supply a simple sound adjustment and flash yellow if intended for you to continue holding the button for a different latched type effect. When no articulation is used, the buttons stay unlit. As expected, the new sounds were beautiful. Full of expression and realism. Clarinet, Trumpet, Irish flutes, sax's, all were the most realistic I've heard to date. Playing the styles was a real treat. Every style that was familiar from previous models, added little nuances which made them sound new and fresh. Articulated sounds were added where they weren't present in the Tyros2. I also noticed alot more dynamics within older styles. I kept going to a PSRS900 and the Tyros 3 and compared same styles but could hear the dynamics changing in the Tyros3 which didn't occur in the 900. I've had a bad cold and wanted to go home to watch the LA Angels play the Boston RedSox and so here I am now.........I'll play alot more tomorrow! ------------------ George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene Reseda, California 818-881-5566 www.kayesmusicscene.com
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George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene (Closed after 51 years) West Hills, California (Retired 2021)
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#244216 - 10/07/08 06:28 AM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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#244218 - 10/07/08 08:02 AM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Thanks George for an excellent review. I hope to get my hands on one to try out in the next few weeks, then I'll make the final decision. I guess I'm one of those folks that just doesn't jump over the fence and buy before trying. The only concern I have at this point is the additional weight I'll be lugging from job to job. I placed three bricks on my keyboard case which also held my PSR-3000. I figured that would be equal to the T3, plus the new case needed to carry it. To this old man it felt as if there was another keyboard in the case with the 3000. I could not imagine lugging around a G-70 weight keyboard ever again.
Thanks again for your review,
Gary
_________________________
PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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#244233 - 10/07/08 03:43 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/24/99
Posts: 3305
Loc: Reseda, California USA
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So I came into my store today and played and played. First, to answer the question about the camparison from the Ketron SD5 "blow tenor" sax and the Tyros3 "Breathy Sax" Super Articulation 2, I've gone to both and compared. The Ketron SD5 sounds very good but no mater how hard or soft I hit the keys, there is no interaction taking place. What I mean is that the sound gets louder or softer, but the amount of air or anything else associated with the playing of the sax doesn't change. There is delayed vibrato that is always in the sound. I can't control it. On the Tyros 3 the sax sound has the air like the Ketron, but there is so much more happening depending on how hard I hit the key, if I add aftertouch, and if I play legato vs sticcato and if when playing legato if I play exactly one octave I hear the effect of a sax glissando, etc. To my ears, I would never get tired of playing the Yamaha sound where the Ketron sound would just be the same exact sound forever. I hope I explained this OK. I played the Organs and used the 9 sliders for controlling the draw bars. My only complaint is that the effect variation button to control the speed of the leslie is all the way up on right side of the keyboard and I would rather have it be able to be assigned to one of the two super articulation keys. I've already called Yamaha and spoke with Steve Deming and he told me to right it down because maybe a software version could possibly add this or if not, be added to the assignable slider as an option. Next, I recorded using the Hard Disk Record function. It was very easy, like the Tyros2 and I also overdubed over my initial recording. It worked great, and very clean without having to adjust anything. I also tried to record a song and the record funtion works like all the other Yamaha's. You hit record, all tracks are armed with a predetermined part so that you can just record anything available to you on the keyboard, parts, style tracks, pads, etc. and you get each track up to 16 recorded. Then, if you want to record on an unused track you just specify what part you want to use. So, say you are going to add an R1 part to be a flute on track 5 which is preset to be Multi Pad 1, you just change that track to say R1 and away you go! I noticed how good some of the new effects are. For Example, on one of the Big Band Styles, they use Super Articulation 2 Jazz Trumpet and I was hearing the best muted trumpet I've heard........and realized they weren't using a muted trumpet but rather a new effect type which is actually a tube sounding distortion, tweaked to sound just like a muted trumpet! Fantastic! I've transfered hundreds of midi files and styles from my USB flash drive into the hard drive and everything plays great. That's all for now. ------------------ George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene Reseda, California 818-881-5566 www.kayesmusicscene.com
_________________________
George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene (Closed after 51 years) West Hills, California (Retired 2021)
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#244240 - 10/08/08 12:23 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: CA
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Originally posted by George Kaye: "The piano is the best piano I've heard in any Yamaha. It has more variation and realism from soft to loud. The bottom end has huge boldness, the middle is beautiful and the top end can be played with a softness or boldness." All that greatness and only 61 keys to play it on. How sad... And to someone who plays a lot of Piano - how frustrating it must be. I know, I know... there's always the Octave button, right? You would have to be a magician to work it seamlessly during a Live performance though. And with the possibility of a slip up while using the Octave buttons during a Live performance, the cost would simply be too high, in my opinion, to dare even attempt it. Best, Mike PS: Only three years to go before Yammies next totl arranger - which will hopefully have a sufficient amount of keys to make playing that beautiful sounding Piano voice worthwhile.
_________________________
Yamaha Genos, Mackie HR824 MKII Studio Monitors, Mackie 1202 VLZ Pro Mixer (made in USA), Cakewalk Sonar Platinum, Shure SM58 vocal mic.
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#244242 - 10/08/08 12:51 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by George Kaye: The piano is the best piano I've heard in any Yamaha. It has more variation and realism from soft to loud. The bottom end has huge boldness, the middle is beautiful and the top end can be played with a softness or boldness. George, You're so right about the piano sound...it is very very good...and the response to the FSX keyboard is perfect. I love the "Cocktail" and "Ambient" Pianos too, and I may be mistaken, but the Live!Grand seems to be even better...I actually prefer it over the Live!Concert Grand for my type of music, in fact, rolling off -15 of the brightness on the filter makes it a perfect piano for soft jazz ballads. Although I've never heard the Ketron Sax, I can vouch for the SA2 Breathy Sax as being the finest I've played. The SA buttons are easier than I thought they would be. The sliders are well made...smooth and accurate...no wobbles and they are perfectly placed. Organs are a big improvement...much beefier...and the rotary effect is much better. This is an incredible instrument, and a serious upgrade from the Tyros2. Ian the Unbiased PS...I'm going to have a ball demoing this thing. [This message has been edited by ianmcnll (edited 10-08-2008).]
_________________________
Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#244249 - 10/08/08 07:17 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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I know it's kind of tedious, George, but is it easy to take a look at the style data in microscope mode, and see whether that snare is simply a result of either a volume command to make it louder, or a greater velocity to the part, or is it REALLY a better, newer drum sample? If it turns out to be the former two, there's a good chance that everyone with a T2 could get the same effect with just a tweak to the styles they already have... In fact, this would be the perfect thing for Sørenson to make some software to do (you know Yamaha won't make this one! ). Take the 'tweaks' that have been made to the styles from the T2 that are in the T3, and reverse engineer them so that the T2 could gain that extra 'punch' as well... If I had a T2, I'm not sure I'd be trading up until I knew for certain that many of the sonic improvements aren't simply some changes to the velocities, EQ's and effects that could be done in the T2 I already have.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#244263 - 10/10/08 10:05 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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#244271 - 10/20/08 06:33 PM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Member
Registered: 12/02/99
Posts: 924
Loc: Johnson City, TN USA
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As I said, the keyboard that is right for you, is a personal thing. Yes the KN7000 has a hinged cover and a keyboard that many didn’t like because you could bang into the end of the keyboard if you were used to more keys because it was “sunken” somewhat. But, no keyboard at that time had the sequencer editing stuff that the KN7000 has. It is easy to make multiple recordings, editing tracks, copying tracks, merging tracks, punching in where you want etc., etc. You can add, delete, move, change duration or timing, or velocity, of notes within the sequence. Possibilities for editing are almost endless. Then after you have the recording the way you want it, you can connect to a PC via USB and transfer the recording to the PC in digital form (.wav format) directly. There is no need for old-fashioned analog recording. The KN7000 also contains removable flash memory (SD Card) for song setups and/or sequences. Voicing is a subjective thing and what one person thinks is great may sound awful to someone else. I have always been pleased with Technics voicing and especially the ability to edit any sound of the keyboard in most any way that I like, creating my own new sounds. To my knowledge, no keyboard has a display that compares to the large display of the KN7000. All of this stuff was available before the Tyros 2 was released.
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#244274 - 07/15/10 01:52 AM
Re: Tyros 3 First Impressions
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Junior Member
Registered: 07/14/10
Posts: 2
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Originally posted by Ketron_AJ: ... Another factor (probably over-looked) is the build quality of the T3 versus the others. It wasn't surprising when I looked under my units (4 that were sent in from Germany with 1 being returned) and found out that they were all made in .... JAPAN !!! Are those that are being sold in the US also made in Japan (George, please confirm)?
GREAT!!!!
That might explain why ... * The screen has equal brightness from left to right, top to bottom (unlike most T2s were it was sometimes uneven) - which could be why the LCD contrast button has been eliminated? * The keybed feels more sturdy (try wiggling keys from left to right - then do the same on the T2 or T1). * Internal components - you can now (by switching 2 wires) change the voltage required between 110v (US) and 220v (World). * USB sockets wired directly to CPU board versus previous extra circuit boards. * Better ventilation on power circuit boards. * etc ...
... Then again, all Tyros' were designed in Japan so it could just be modifications in many instances due to what was learned and researched in the field by the previous models (as many manufacturers do). However, beign designed in Japan and built with Japanese components using Japanese Labor is a HUGE difference as opposed to designed in Japan and built in ... e.g. China?
Either way, the build quiality of the T3, the SA1 and SA2 voices plus the extra control capability (Art1 & Art2) offered to control these from the panel (rather than only via the footswich) are great improvements. I however reserve my personal views on the "Arranger aspects" and features - especially drums and bass!! Hi Ketron_AJ, This posting from back in October 2008 states that the working voltage can be changed from 110v to 220v by switching 2 wires. I just bought a T3 on Ebay from a seller in Ohio and had it shipped to a friend in Phoenix AZ who I was scheduled to visit. I brought the keyboard backt o the UK with me on the flight home but have not yet had it powered up in the UK because I have seen conflicting advice on various forums about whether the T3 is 'dual voltage'. My T3 was made in Japan but states 110v 60Hz on the bottom and when I contacted Yamaha UK about this they said I should NOT plug it into a 220v supply without using a transformer to step down to 110v. I have had the cover off the T3 and the Power Board says 250v next to the connection from the mains plug. Can I ask where you got the information about 'moving 2 wires' and which 2 wires are supposed to be moved to switch from 110v to 220v. Peter Hawkins York England tyros@uk12.net
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