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#244836 - 10/14/08 06:37 PM
Re: E60 and tyros2
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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I'm a Roland fan.., but do have Yamaha in my set up. However, in this case I'd say go with the Tyros 2 man! For that price it's a steal. If you're about "styles" the Tyros will have more 3rd party support as well.
It would also depend on the condition of that T2. If it's well used.., then for that price getting a brand spankin new E-60 is very tempting as well.
[This message has been edited by squeak_D (edited 10-14-2008).]
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GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.
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#244839 - 10/14/08 07:12 PM
Re: E60 and tyros2
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14286
Loc: NW Florida
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Get the T2, and plug a 76 or 88 into it! In fact, get them BOTH... That's a pretty powerful combination! I'm not sure, if the E50 didn't keep you happy, that a 76 stuck on is going to make THAT much difference. But the T2 at that price IS a steal, I would go for that, see if you can live with it, and you'll make a profit if you sell it (unless you rush it), anyway... And personally, I would look for a good used G70 over a new E60, any day!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#244840 - 10/14/08 07:25 PM
Re: E60 and tyros2
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/31/06
Posts: 3354
Loc: The World
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Thanks guys..
Yes it is a tough call..Both have good points.
I agree the T2 is a steal, and the price is one of the main considerations...I did like the E50 with most of the G70's operational set, but couldn't deal with the keybed.
I also liked the T1 as well, but felt restricted by the keybed.
As for the G70, if one came up here s/h I would jump at it, but Roland sold so few out here, that they just don't come up. I suspect the people who bought them were very similar to you Fran and you Diki, they know what they've got and will not part with them.
Sounds would not really be an issue as I would be mainly using the XS rack and I have a CME 76 note controller (They ARE actually quite good for the money!!) But I am not a "keyboard stack" kinda guy, LOL too much effort.
I can sorta agree with you Diki when you say at that price get both, and if I did this I could sell off the CME replacing it with the E60.
And then there is the issue of the Media Station I know Fran has advised to be patient, but I cannot wait forever and that IS one keyboard that will need a lot of setting up, it would be worth it I think, but a lto of work...decisions decisions...
Thanks again to all for your thoughts, they are all appreciated and very useful.
Dennis
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#244842 - 10/15/08 01:19 AM
Re: E60 and tyros2
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14286
Loc: NW Florida
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Originally posted by Scott Langholff: Really? How many agree with this that have tried both? http://www.purgatorycreek.com/index.html It's the definitive place for comparison of sampled piano. EXACTLY the same SMF, played through nearly everything there is. Very dynamic, very full ranged, and all extreme's of playing, from soft and close=voiced middle range notes to bright and open extremes. The perfect apples to apples site. No factory runs it, the files are user submitted and peer reviewed. For me, there isn't the slightest doubt. Play the Tysos2 piano file, then play the FantomX (same as G70). Night and day... (it is the one!) Sure, the Tyros is nice and bright, and cuts through a mix like a laser. But the Roland sounds more like a REAL piano, in person. No EQ tricks, just plain piano. It's easier to EQ brightness into a good natural piano sound (just cut some lows, low mids, a hair of air at the top) than to create warmth and natural low to med-low velocities from a bright sample that doesn't have it (IMO ) For me, in particular, it's the quieter passages that show off the Roland 'sound'. Sure, both have pretty good loud piano sounds. But when it gets quiet, soft, whatever, when I listen to the Roland's, I get the feeling the piano is still right in front of me, but when the Yamaha's get quiet, I get more of a sense of 'distance', as if the darn thing just got twenty feet away, or something... I would STILL like to hear the new T3 piano on the Purgatory Creek file. I think it possibly addresses that T2 lack of low end warmth. But at least I'll be hearing it as a direct comparison to Roland and all the others, rather than a subjective one if they all had different tunes and players, etc.! All of this is, of course, completely my opinion I urge everyone to make the most of the Purgatory Creek resource, and start to listen objectively, at least to piano sounds!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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