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#94015 - 11/05/01 06:58 PM PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
shiral Offline
Member

Registered: 03/10/01
Posts: 146
Loc: IL, USA
I bought a PA80 a few days ago. I like its sounds, but dissapointed mainly with fill-ins and the way voices switch.

1) when you switch a voice the previous voice stops immediately most of the time. PA80 users: Is there a way to keep the old voice playing until I hit the next key ? PSR9000/2000/9000Pro users: does it happen on your Yamaha ?

The reason I am asking is I am thinking of returning this and going for a Yamaha.

2) PA80 has 4 variations, but only 2 fill-ins. As a result these two fill-ins do not match all 4 variations. In some cases --if not most-- when you hit the fill-in button it sounds like another band rushed in to play the fill-in and went off as soos as they were done with it. How well do fill-ins blend with variation on Yamaha boards ?

3) The way the buttons respond is also odd to me. When you hit the fill-in button, the keyboard immediately jumps in to the fill-in. This steals the flexibility of changing a chord, playing a note and begining a fill-in at the same time which sometimes is the case at the end of a part when the song goes to the "dominant" for a measure or two. I prefer the way my PSR510 fill-in buttons respond. i.e. If you hit the fill-in button just before the first beat of the measure, the keyboard waits until the first beat and plays the fill-in. If you press the fill-in button a little after the first beat, only the drum track of the fill-in comes on, the other parts are played from the variation. This prevents abrupt changes from variation to fill-in. How do PSR2000/9000(Pro) behave ?

4) Sometimes PA80 plays the 5th note on bass at chord changes. This doesn't happen often, but PA80 has a very low tolerance compared to my PSR510. It happens like this. Suppose the bass guitar plays root at the first beat and 5th note at the 3rd beat and suppose you are playing C and change to G at the 3rd beat. Then the keyboard should play G not D (unless specifically asked to do otherwise) at that point and then switch to its normal pattern. One can not hit the G chord right at the 3rd beat as precisely as a computer does, so the keyboad should have some tolerance. On my PSR510, the keyboard recognizes that I meant to change to G at the 3rd beat no matter I changed the chord a split second before or after 3rd beat, But on PA80, if I hit G a split second before, the keyboard thinks I was in G alread by the 3rd beat (of course, technically that is true) and plays D at 3rd beat. This sounds odd then. This doesn't happen often, because most of the styles keep playing the root on bass most of the time hence reducing the chance of such coincidence. I guess PSR2000/9000/9000Pro behave similar to PSR510 in this regard.

I really appreciate if PA80 users can tell me if there are ways around and if PSR2000/9000/9000Pro users can tell me how there keyboards behave in this regard.

Shiral

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#94016 - 11/05/01 08:29 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
DonM Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 06/25/99
Posts: 16735
Loc: Benton, LA, USA
Shiral, The PSR2000 holds the note until you release it, even after changing voices, in fact--even after you change One-touch settings.
Also, I am very impressed with the way the 2000 handles chord recognition--very tolerant.
Incidentally, the fill-ins were one of the reasons I didn't keep the PA80, along with the limited Vocal Harmony.
DonM
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#94017 - 11/05/01 09:29 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Bluezplayer Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
The new OS will allow 4 fills per style in the PA80. Hopefully, they will match the styles a bit better. With the already excellent sounds the PA80 has and the promise of the added features of OS3, I'm definitely keeping mine, but after demoing the PSR2000, I think I'll be replacing my PSR740 with it. In my opinion, both boards are a winner. For someone like me, who creates at home and in the studio more than I play out, the PA80, with all of its functions and its excellent sounds, is the clear winner, but for those times when I do play out, I'll be bringing the PSR2000, as I find it much easier to navigate already after fooling around with it for a couple of hrs, than I do my PA80, which I've had almost 6 months already.

AJ

[This message has been edited by Bluezplayer (edited 11-05-2001).]
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#94018 - 11/06/01 10:31 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
shiral Offline
Member

Registered: 03/10/01
Posts: 146
Loc: IL, USA
Thanks a lot Don and AJ for the info. Thanks also for the responses in the other thread.

Shiral

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#94019 - 11/07/01 12:24 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Krix Offline
Member

Registered: 11/28/99
Posts: 124
Loc: Linkoping, SWEDEN
You must have (at least) two (2) keyboards
to be satisfied.
Begin NOW to save money!

Krix, I have already begun
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Krix

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#94020 - 11/07/01 03:46 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
shiral Offline
Member

Registered: 03/10/01
Posts: 146
Loc: IL, USA
You read my mind Krix :-)

That's exactly what I am going to do. I am going to keep the PA80 and buy a PSR2000 when I have saved enough money for that. I think that's going to be a good combination; one covering up for the weeknesses of the other.

Shiral

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#94021 - 11/07/01 05:07 PM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Bluezplayer Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
Ditto Shiral, exactly what I'm planning to do as well. I already have the PA80 and a 740, and plan to upgrade from the 740 to the 2000, not so much because of shortcomings of one or the other, but rather because Yamaha does have a few sounds that I prefer, and the 2000 will be easier to operate for me in a live real time setting as a solo or duet act, while I'll use the PA80 more as a composition tool. Still I can see those specific uses overlapping too, as both boards seem to pretty capable of doing both things. LOL Krix, I'm thinking 3 boards at least ( my ancient M1 doesnt count though..it was a great board in it's day and I guess is looked at as a classic by some, but for me it's day is long over ), so the 3rd might be a Roland something or other or maybe better yet a Nord Lead just so I can have some real knobs to play with on those fat synth sounds.

AJ
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AJ

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#94022 - 11/08/01 08:51 AM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Bill E Offline
Member

Registered: 06/12/01
Posts: 223
Loc: nashville
shiral-that is what killed the deal for me with the pa80. I am amazed that the fill-in issue is just now showing up on this forum, is this not a big deal to everyone?
I spent two hours with pa80 at sam ash yesterday and sadly gave up. I really wanted to like it because it sounds good and looks cool , and yes, looks matter when I spend that kind of cash! I am glad that yamaha is getting that message-the 740 and 9000 were a big step down from the psr8000 in style points!
Bill E

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#94023 - 11/08/01 09:27 AM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Krix Offline
Member

Registered: 11/28/99
Posts: 124
Loc: Linkoping, SWEDEN
Dear Buzy

Nord Lead would be a perfect choice.
Sweden needs more export-income.


Krix
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Krix

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#94024 - 11/08/01 09:42 AM Re: PA80 and PSR9000/2000 owners, please help
Krix Offline
Member

Registered: 11/28/99
Posts: 124
Loc: Linkoping, SWEDEN
Is it possible to have a reasonable cheap sound-module (synth-modul) connected to a keyboard and partially
use its (terrific?) sounds when you play the kbd?


Krix
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Krix

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