"the jazz scat sound" I can show the most perfect ever piano sound in any keyboard, nothing impresses bandmembers more than that 'DAAAW' on a scat sound.
I wish manufacturers would stop starting their advertisements by pointing out that they have graded hammer action, that's an industry standard now, not a special feature. It hasn't been special for nearly a decade.
i mean, *harpsichord*?? why are they still including this? Sure, if you want harpsichord for some arcane reason, you would get a synth that has like *everything*. But, in a standalone, cheap, piano, it would be better to have either more variety of classic sounds or maybe some brass or something.
But for classical keyboard players having the harpsichord in a digital piano can be quite useful for baroque repertoire. I myself know people who take harpsichord lessons but practice on digital pianos such as this one
Reminds me of the Yamaha P-45 but the added Bluetooth function is pretty fantastic
I have FP-30. But I need a shorter version like 61 keys. That is all.
"the jazz scat sound"
I can show the most perfect ever piano sound in any keyboard, nothing impresses bandmembers more than that 'DAAAW' on a scat sound.
Just under 28 quid for that ? Wow that is amazing! Wait... did she just say £4.99 ... ?
Lol i'll take 3
I wish manufacturers would stop starting their advertisements by pointing out that they have graded hammer action, that's an industry standard now, not a special feature. It hasn't been special for nearly a decade.
Actually it's the first time i hear that, haven't been searching for pianos lately though...
But what else could she possibly say about it?
For a $500 Roland piano?! Of course that's worth mentioning lol...
do you mean that all hammer actions provide the same quality of playing ? i understand that Roland's one is the best available at this price point.
Actually some pianos still weight their keys in blocks, not individually so it's worth mentioning
i mean, *harpsichord*?? why are they still including this? Sure, if you want harpsichord for some arcane reason, you would get a synth that has like *everything*. But, in a standalone, cheap, piano, it would be better to have either more variety of classic sounds or maybe some brass or something.
But for classical keyboard players having the harpsichord in a digital piano can be quite useful for baroque repertoire. I myself know people who take harpsichord lessons but practice on digital pianos such as this one
As stale an instrument as Roland could possibly make
Dara M sounds great for this price range.
The embodiment of underwhelming.