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#472481 - 07/07/19 09:59 AM
Re: Nothing wrong with Arranger keyboards....
[Re: cgiles]
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Member
Registered: 03/22/17
Posts: 449
Loc: Mountain Home, AR
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Been following this thread for awhile and I'm amazed at the number of comments alluding to how 'easy' it is to play an arranger. Man I'm finding the 3000 I have is as complicated as anything I have dealt with. Seems there is nothing I can do that is as simple as just calling up a style and playing the tune and have it sound decent. I know many home users do it that way but I want to have a professional sound. To get the arranger to do what I want I have to spend just as much time, if not more, setting things up as I would if I was using other boards and a DAW. For my 2 cents worth the main advantage of a TOTL arranger is its OMB abilities. With the ability to control vsts I would have no problem plyin in a band.
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PSR 740,PSR 3000, Mirage, tx7, mp32, Pro Tools 10,11 SONAR, Reaper, BIAB 2020 and a pile of Computer Music mags w/disks College student was working on Doctoral, Education Now just doing courses to do courses
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#472482 - 07/07/19 10:35 AM
Re: Nothing wrong with Arranger keyboards....
[Re: cgiles]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Earl, that 3000 is nothing more than a computer with piano keys. It will do anything you tell it to do, but in order to accomplish all that you wish, you must be able to speak it's language, which can take many years to learn. I used the 3000 for many, many years, explored every feature and aspect, and I can guarantee you that there were things I never discovered. Life on stage was a lot easier when I was just a young man sitting on a bar stool with a 12-string guitar and a several, 3-inch thick books of lyrics in a milk box and one on a music stand. Fortunately, for me, I have always had a good technical mind, and unendingly curious about the inner workings of electronic devices, computers, printers, bio-medical monitoring systems, etc... When I was just 24 years old and working at the University Of Maryland Hospital in Baltimore, I helped design one of the first physiological monitoring systems in the country for the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Unit. It monitored 17 bodily functions at the same time, displaced them on a 21-inch blue and white screen, and was the size of a large door. It weighed more than 300 pounds and was on 4 heavy-duty casters so we could move it around. Today, through miniaturization of transistors, chips and ICs, the same system would be about 20 pounds, and the size of a breadbox. Same is true with arranger keyboards. When I got my first arranger keyboard, a Mitsubishi, if I recall correctly, it weighed about 40 pounds, had 35 styles and 30 voices. At the time, I loved playing it, and the operating system was such that you pretty much could not do another other than just sit and play - no tweaking or tuning, no EQ, nothing but a bare bones instrument. Today, there is absolutely nothing you cannot do with an arranger keyboard. I think in the right hands, it will even make your lunch for you. They are truly amazing instruments that ironically, only a tiny fraction of the owners/users have taken time to delve into the inner workings and really put them through their paces. Much of this is because of the complexity of the instrument, while the other is just plain laziness and not wanting to spend the time involved in pursing the end result. I know a lot of folks that have never taken the user manual out of the zip-loc bag it arrived in with their keyboard, let alone opened it and read each and every page while sitting next to the keyboard and going through the steps. Good luck, Gary
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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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#472487 - 07/07/19 11:05 AM
Re: Nothing wrong with Arranger keyboards....
[Re: cgiles]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Bill, your examples above clearly go to show that ALL music consist of repetitive styles, therefore, each of those YouTube examples sound quite similar because they ARE repetitive, especially with the drums, bass and other voices. The only thing that separates one from the other is the lead voices, which are improvisational at best. Sorry Bill, but I really see no difference based upon your exemplars. You could do the exact, same thing with any arranger keyboard right out of the box and probably do it better because of the many automated features at your fingertips. All the best, 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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