Ian is and has been blessed with his Tyros 4. As a matter of fact the star price goes to the latter who has been singing the praises of and been loyal to his Yamaha Tyros for more thant two years now.
...I have maintained all along, to get some decent stuff out of any quality arranger requires scores and scores of hours of tweaking and programming.One of the reasons I stuck with the PA800 because I could not bring myself to having to start from scratch by purchasing the PA900 or PA3X. Anyway I ain't complaining with the additional PSR750.
P.S. it seems a lot of Yamaha fanatics are getting all worked up about the arrival of the new Tyros 5 or whatever it may be called.
My my my, John, has it been TWO years already?
I guess that proves the old adage, "Time passes quickly when you are having fun."
I have only felt this contented with two arrangers prior to my Tyros4, and they were the PSR-8000 and the PSR-3000, although the S910 gets an honorable mention.
The Tyros5 holds no more interest to me than any new TOTL arranger by Yamaha or any other manufacturer...of course, it will be interesting to see what gets added, or perhaps, taken away, but I'm very content with my choice of arranger, and I am very grateful that I was able to acquire it at a very reasonable price.
I agree with the OS familiarity and also the tweaking process, as the former makes the latter so much easier, and having your own "sound" on an arranger is primarily due to style editing/assembly/re-voicing. The hours I spent programming on the PSR-8000 and PSR-3000 were more "fun" than work, and the Tyros4 is even better due to more style editing flexibility. In fact, at this point with the Tyros4, I am using
only my own styles, but was helped along by good
basic factory styles to work from, and a plethora of
third party styles that became donors for my own assembled creations, which I lovingly refer to as my "Frankenstyles".
In spite of being under my fingers for TWO whole years
, the Tyros4 still beckons me to turn it on and have fun. I put in at least two or three hours a day on the instrument, and I'm still blown away by the quality of the sounds, especially those lovely SA/SA2 voices that are so incredibly expressive.
If I was to add another keyboard, it might possibly be a Casio PX5S, which I feel would be a perfect compliment to my Tyros4.
I can see how having two (or even three) MOTL arrangers from different manufacturers would be very interesting, but I prefer to focus all my efforts on the one system I know extremely well.
Ian