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#481335 - 11/21/19 08:12 AM
Re: Is an Arranger Keyboard a Musical Instrument?
[Re: abacus]
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/02/06
Posts: 7143
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The question is What sound does an arranger keyboard produce of it's own that is not a copy of something else, other instruments have their own sound and are not copy's of other instruments, so what is the arranger keyboard sound, we all know what a piano is, an organ is, an Oboe is etc. but what is the unique sound of an arranger keyboard that is not a copy.
Bill Any sound you create with the on board edditors... You can go really crazy on some arrangers like the pa4x where it comes to creating your own sounds... even the Genos is okay for that... The same discussion could be about todays organs and stage piano’s .. The power of an arranger keys these days, is that its a synth, which allows you to create both authentic sounds, as well as emulating sounds... If you want to cattegorise all the above instruments, they are synths. Which means an instrument that allows you to create your own sound... hench, synthesis.
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#481343 - 11/21/19 09:13 AM
Re: Is an Arranger Keyboard a Musical Instrument?
[Re: abacus]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
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(disclaimer: no wikipedia used - posted actual memory) When I was studying music (at Temple in Philly) in the 70s, they taught us that there were 4 groups of "instruments". They were: Percussion - things that need to be struck to make sound (piano is part of this group) Woodwind - things that use wood to manipulate air to produce sound (early flutes were made of wood, so they are in this group) Brass - things that use brass to manipulate, and amplify air to produce sound, and Strings - obvious description. My first question was ... "What about a Hammond organ?" Is that NOT an instrument? The books at the time all said no, because it didn't move air. The tone wheels use electricity to spin, and create a sine wave that is sent to an amplifier, and the "sound" comes from a speaker, thereby not creating the tone, itself. Without a speaker, and amplifier, it is not capable of moving air. Early pump organs, may complicate this argument, but the simple truth was - in order to pass that course, I needed to say that there were only 4 groups of musical instruments. I wonder what they are teaching today's music students? With all the cyber, and virtual sonic choices we have - what's real, and what's "memorex?" (there's an OLD memory, huh?) Food for thought.
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