Posts tagged ‘keyboards’

jin posted:


Friends,

I am a bit confused between buying a Yamaha PSRe313 and Yamaha YPT310. Can any of you keyboard champs can help me decide which one is better …

Also, I stay in NJ-is there any store around where I can test these keyboards by playing them….it will help me decide better :)

Thanks for any help

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roland keyboards
jumanji asked:


I am looking for the Roland d 50 synthesizer, but they are often expensive. Are there any other Roland models that are similar to the d 50 that i can buy for less? thanks

gospel piano lessons
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roland keyboards
stephen_cyprus asked:


I now have a macintosh computer, a tascam us428 digital interface mixer, a d20 roland keyboard.

Please help

jazz piano lessons

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roland keyboards
N/A asked:


Who would take a Roland FP-5 over a Yamaha DGX-505 and why?

Learn To Play The Piano
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Have you ever wondered how the piano came to have both black and white keys?

And why? Why should there be two different groups of keys? Why not just have an unending row of white keys?

The answer lies in both the physics of acoustics and the construction of the human hand.

The first keyboards were derived from an ancient Greek water organ called the Hydraulis. This organ-like instrument had in essence a uniform group of levers (think “all white”) that you pushed to make the sounds on the organ.

Although it was not always true, the keys on a Hydraulis were generally organized in groups of seven keys, corresponding to the seven white keys of any modern scale or mode. (A scale or mode is the rationale that governs how much higher each key will be in pitch than the previous key.)

But soon, composers wanted to go beyond the limitations of the seven keys, and began to add another key, which usually was colored differently from the others and set apart slightly.

Starting with one black key, composers eventually discovered that there were five (black) keys that could be added to the original seven (white) keys.

The $64,000 question, though, is how the black keys came to be grouped in twos and threes.

The answer lies in the construction of the human hand, but to understand that we must first examine the keyboard itself.

Imagine, if you will, an imaginary piano keyboard that has alternating white and black keys across the entire 5-foot length.

You can visualize this if you take a piece of paper or cardboard and hold it perpendicular to the keys, masking your view of the black keys. What do you see? A mass of white keys with no way of distinguishing exactly which white key is which.

Now imagine again the keyboard as described above, an imaginary piano keyboard that has alternating white and black keys across the entire 5 foot length.

Even with black keys, one is still lost, as there is no pattern in the white-black arrangement that will allow you to consistently pick out any particular black or white key. All the eye can see is white-black-white-black endlessly, with no way of finding any pattern to the arrangement.

Sometime around 1400, some very clever person realized that if you put the black keys into groups of two and three, (2+3=5) a recognizable visual pattern emerged that allowed a player to easily distinguish each key, white or black.

History does not record who this genius was.

Next, after many years people had played the keyboard long enough to develop considerable skill.

The result of this was the raising of the black keys slightly above the level of the white keys, and then came the most revolutionary idea of all: make the black keys shorter than the white, only slightly further away from the player.

But why? The answer lies in the human hand.

We have five “fingers” but they are not equal in capability at the piano.

The thumb is dominant and yet it is the shortest finger on the hand.

Thus the piano keyboard fits the human hand by making the white keys closer to accommodate the shorter thumb, and the black keys further away to accommodate the longer “non-thumb” fingers.

You can see this by simply putting your hand on a keyboard. Your thumb will comfortably reach the white keys and the other fingers are easily within reach of both the black and white keys.

Name another machine from the Renaissance with thousands of moving parts that has survived like the unique design of the piano keyboard.

No other device except perhaps the glove fits the human hand so perfectly.

By John Aschenbrenner Copyright 2000 Walden Pond Press

John Aschenbrenner is a leading children’s music educator and book publisher, and the author of numerous fun piano method books in the series PIANO BY NUMBER for kids. You can see the PIANO BY NUMBER series of books at http://www.pianoiseasy.com

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You want to learn to play a keyboard or maybe your partner or your children want to learn and you need to buy a keyboard but where do you start.

If you follow my recommendations, buying your first keyboard will be an easier experience. Prices for keyboards range from about £100.00 to £5000.00 or more. In this article, we will deal with keyboards that are more than adequate for beginners. As a beginner, there is no point in spending thousands of pounds on a keyboard because you will not be able to use the more advanced features that are included on these keyboards because you can’t play yet.

Before you go and buy your keyboard, you should consider
that the keyboard you buy is going to be the first of many or the first and last keyboard you ever buy.

So the first thing you need to think about is budget. For a beginners keyboard I would personally not spend more than £500.00 but would be looking in £100.00 to £300.00 range. Obviously, you need to set your own budget within this range. When you have set your budget, you need to decide where you are going to buy your keyboard.

I would defiantly recommend buying a keyboard from a music shop. I know you can find cheaper keyboards on the internet from various mail order companies and eBay but there are many advantages to buying from your local music shop. The first advantage being that you can hear and see the keyboard you are about to buy. Also generally, the sales staff in these shops know what they are talking about and can play the instruments and show you how they work. Many music shops can also offer keyboard lessons and provide sheet music to get you started.

When choosing your keyboard, it’s important you like the look of it and like the sound of it. There are various manufacturers to choose from, the main ones being Yamaha, Casio and Roland. Many musicians have there own preferences as to which make they prefer, including myself, however, I would urge you to make your own mind up, after all you have got to look at it and listen to it.

So to recap:

Set your budget.

Buy from your local music shop.

Make sure you like what you see and hear.

In part two I will tell you what keyboard features you should expect for your money and maybe some features you don’t need.

Mike Shaw is an organist and keyboard player and owns music websites, http://www.mikesmusicroom.co.uk, http://www.keyboardsheetmusic.co.uk and http://musical-instruments-uk.mikesmusicroom.co.uk/

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