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#280298 - 01/29/10 01:38 AM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Member
Registered: 08/24/04
Posts: 666
Loc: City of Angels in the golden s...
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#280303 - 01/30/10 11:34 PM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by Nick G:
it has way more better pad voices, synth leads, dance hooks, synth basses and drum kits.
it is definitely punchier and more crisp sounding that the Tyros 2 - and this is on the "flat" EQ setting.
k Nick, Many of the new synth voices also respond to the mod wheel, which opens and closes the filter. They are cool! I find the S910 not only punchier than the Tyros2, but also sweeter sounding than the Tyros3. I'm using the preset "Concert" EQ setting with my Yamaha MS60S powered monitors...it also works quite well with the Logitech Z-2300 system, and the Yamaha Stagepas 300/500 PA systems. Sort of a good all rounder. Ian
_________________________
Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#280305 - 01/31/10 05:56 AM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/16/05
Posts: 1115
Loc: Sydney, NSW, Australia
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Hi Johnny, The psr s910 is hands down a much better machine than the Tyros 2! To me the only 1 thing that the Tyros 2 has over the PSR is the keybed... I had the Tyros 2 for a year or so and straight away after playing a few styles and sounds on the psr u can tell the difference in sound. The drums are much more punchier and crisp. the analog t8 and t9 kits are a big improvement over the "dance kit" The synth basses, synth voices and pads are far better as well. I am very surprised how many good usable synth sounds there are in this 'mid range' keyboard. I have a Motif XS 6 which has not been switched on since I purchased the PSR S910. just as Ian said - the Mod wheel works for most of the synth and pad voices as a cut off filter! this board is definitely the first PSR which you could classify as a semi synth arranger. I doesnt have the granular sound editing that the Korgs and Rolands have but to me the sounds are already spot on! Only minimal editing is required for some voices. Just to add - I am using the Logitech Z2300 speaker system as well. I wish there was a speaker mute button on the PSR but I figured that you just need to stick a guitar jack into the headphone port to mute the speakers I havent mucked around with the USB recording or MP3 playback yet but should do very soon. -Nick
_________________________
Roland G70 / Roland BK9 / Roland GW-8L / Roland Fantom O6 / Yamaha Motif XS / Technics KN6500
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#280307 - 01/31/10 07:26 AM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by Nick G:
I doesnt have the granular sound editing that the Korgs and Rolands have but to me the sounds are already spot on! Only minimal editing is required for some voices.
I havent mucked around with the USB recording or MP3 playback yet but should do very soon.
-Nick
It's surprising how much the basic editing, "Voice Set", can affect the sounds...you've got control over Filter, Amplitude, LFO(with Pitch, Filter,and Amplitude modulation), and Envelope Generator. Stacking two synth voices and detuning is cool too. All it takes is a bit of imagination. Certainly more than enough editing for an arranger, because, as you say, the synth sounds are already excellent. The Audio to USB is one of my favorite features...no need of a fiddly HD...use a "no-moving-parts" flashdrive...the instrument records to the USB device in WAV, and it's then easy to upload to your laptop or PC and burn to a CD or convert to MP3 and email to your friends or upload to a forum. The multi pads are great as well...there are quite a few new ones. The PSR-S910 easily rivals TOTL models, and is better than some, and it really lacks nothing I'd need in an arranger. Ian
_________________________
Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#280313 - 02/01/10 06:15 AM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/16/05
Posts: 1115
Loc: Sydney, NSW, Australia
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Originally posted by mc: I debating whether to upgrade to a S910 from S900 but is it really worth it, besides MP3 player, what else really make the s910 stand out better than the S900. I don't want to upgrade for a few new right hand sounds and 1/2 dozen new styles.
thanks for your responses. The PSR 910 has the following: - Mega Strings and the new S.A Strings (from T2) - Mega Trumpets and the new S.A Trumpets (from T2) - the new accordians (from T2) - the new Organs (from T2) - new drum kits (from T3) - new basses (from t3) - new pads (from T3) - new synth voices (from T3) - new multipads (from T3) - better voicing for the guitar chord playback - TFT Screen (crystal clear!) - better quality keybed - New Effects. - overall the board sounds much punchier and clearer than the T2 and PSR S900. Its not just 'a few new voices for the right hand". its essentially a whole new keyboard. I dont own a Tyros 3 but looking at the specs and features - here is what the Tyros 3 has that the PSR S910 does NOT have: - FSX Keyboard - sliders / faders - S.A 2 voices - New Grand Piano Voices - New styles (which can be tweaked to play in the S910) - the bigger fold up screen - ability to layer 3 voices in right hand - Sampling capability maybe more that I have missed...? good lucki! -Nick
_________________________
Roland G70 / Roland BK9 / Roland GW-8L / Roland Fantom O6 / Yamaha Motif XS / Technics KN6500
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#280321 - 02/02/10 02:23 PM
Re: PSR S910 - Fantastic!!
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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Possibly the issue is, how well does the PSR keybed hold up over time? If several users are noting an improvement in the S910's keybed, but Ian (our resident PSR expert) claims no difference, it is fair to assume they are noticing a difference between what they HAD and what they now have... Key wear can have several causes, but obviously, the first is likely to be force with which it is played (followed by how much smearing and glissing you do on it). If you come from a piano background and DON'T adjust your touch drastically to the PSR's ultra-light feel, perhaps it is not standing up too well to this? There are too many reports of 'better feel' from a new PSR keybed to discount this, I think... By the way, just to earn the same fee from Roland as you guys are getting from Y&K ( ), I have to say, I have a G70 that has been gigged almost every day by a pretty hard player for five years, now. And I just bought a backup G70 that was virtually showroom, VERY little use. I cannot tell the slightest difference between the two's actions. Pretty good, in my book. Admittedly, after over ten years on my G1000, I thought the G70 felt a little stiffer, but only marginally. You get what you pay for... (unless you are a WS player, then you get BETTER than what we pay for!)
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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