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#280187 - 01/28/10 03:45 PM
Re: Popularity of Arranger Keyboards Outside of the USA
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14268
Loc: NW Florida
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MJ, I think for a project this large and complicated, the manufacturer themselves are the ones to do the job. They have access to the original sample data, and the arps and loops in the M3 (it's their copyright, actually), so they ought to be the ones profiting from it, I guess...
They also have access to the sample decompression routines inside the PA (their ROM is probably compressed 2:1, so you would get double the samples compared to a straight sample load), and other parameters probably hidden from the general user...
The thing is, the product needs to be commercially available. That's the only way the arranger is going to make a resurgence, IMO...
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#280189 - 01/29/10 09:48 AM
Re: Popularity of Arranger Keyboards Outside of the USA
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Member
Registered: 01/24/10
Posts: 117
Loc: Western Mojave Desert, Califor...
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Originally posted by cgiles: I think that TOTL arrangers are going to price themselves out of existence. It's already getting to the point that only well-heeled ol' folks can afford them. I don't believe that $5,000 is too high a price for a TOTL. Fifty years ago, top of the line keyboards such as Vox, Farfisa, Rhodes, and Gibson were at least $1,000. In 1980, keyboards such as the Sequential Prophet 5 cost $5,000. When you consider inflation, $5k isn't a bad price for the TOTL. Duane O Sacramento, CA
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Korg PA4x76, Yamaha CP-70 Electric Grand Piano, Zoom L20 mixer/recorder, Turbosound ip500 column speaker system
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#280190 - 01/29/10 10:34 AM
Re: Popularity of Arranger Keyboards Outside of the USA
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by cgiles: I think that TOTL arrangers are going to price themselves out of existence. It's already getting to the point that only well-heeled ol' folks can afford them. Certainly not. Many of my T3 clients are retired on a modest income. I don't know who you consider as "ol' folks", but the majority of the T3 users I'm in contact with, are in their 50's and early 60's. At 60 myself, I don't feel old...just older. $5000 isn't outrageous for people to spend on a full time hobby...many people spend more on golfing, or other hobbies. I still move a lot of Tyros3, although the S910 has taken fair sized piece out of it's sales, but at quite a bit less that $2000, one gets an instrument with most of the same features, sounds and styles at roughly a third of the price. still, there will always be those who must have the best, whether it be an Acura over a Honda, or a Tyros3 over a PSR-S910. Ian
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Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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