Hello again, all my SynthZone friends! I have taken the liberty of continuing the former thread about the "end" of the Technics keyboards and starting a second string on the same topic, just to make it easier to read without first having to scroll through all the many comments already written. (I hope you will find it worth reading!)
Anyway, I guess I consider my Technics 7000 somewhat like my "baby", now getting older and growing up. When first "born" about three years ago, I was so excited at the new arrival that I spent untold hours loving and enjoying it. But just as babies' activities and idiosyncrasies become more and more familiar, we become somewhat less attentive. So, I have learned over these last few years many of the possibilities and idiosyncrasies of my Technics 7000 "baby" and perhaps I am paying a bit less attention to it than I did at first, but, just as we continue to learn about our prodigy from day to day, so I discover and learn something new about my 7000 every day.
Now, do we ignore and push aside our real baby just because it is growing older and more familiar to us? NEVER! And so, I will not turn away from my wondrous Technics 7000 "baby" either just because it is now growing older! Will I replace it with something less exciting? No more than I would replace my own children! If another is "born", I will merely add it to the family. But will a new addition totally replace the older one? As I said, NEVER! Let the family grow, but don't compare one with another or consider one superior or inferior to another. Rather let each individual complement and supplement the other(s) and work both together and independently.
So, all my dear SynthZone friends and Technics "parents", continue to enjoy the wonders of learning and growing along with the brilliant keyboard wonders still to be discovered. I will never become either an expert parent or musician--(being a mere amateur "ear player" and non-musician just as perhaps I am just a mere amateur parent to my now grown-up son)--but the love will continue always and I will relish every day we share together.
Perhaps this is a bizarre analogy and maybe even a bit "overboard", but it is my sincere continuing love and affection for an inanimate object that offers me such enormous pleasure in my musical, escapist life, just as my family will always be a central and integral part of my family life.
Long live the Technics keyboards! The producation of the keyboards may have reached an "end", but I sincerely hope that does not mean the end of this tremendously informative and exciting SynthZone forum dedicated to the continued growth of knowledge and friendship among us all!
A happy and thrilling New Year to all you from this Yankee Jaybird in the USA!!!
Ted Rose