Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Yamaha DGX200 76-Key Electronic Keyboard




This review is from: Yamaha DGX200 76-Key Electronic KeyboardI have plyed piano professionally and have a degree in music. i have a very expensive Yamaha Clavinova (as well as a real piano)i bought this thinking of it as a toy for my 22 year old who suddenly wants to play. it has a fabulous piano sound (better than the expensive triton). the built in piano lessons are really helpful. my favorite part is when i taught piano, i could never get kids to practice one hand at a time. this keyboard will play the left hand for you as you play the right and vice versa. my daughter loved that it would record and play back what she had just played. i always discoraged parents from having their kids practice on keyboards but the touch of these keys is very realistic. i would recommend it to someone starting out in piano not wanting to make that huge investment until they were sure they would continue.but, as a keyboard (not a tiny piano) there are enough sounds and gimics for a beginner in keyboards but not for someone who really is into all the synthesizer effects. But, what is this? no power cord? and no sustain pedal. the pedal i can understand but no power cord - that is just too cheap. they should at least put a huge notice on the front of the box that you're going to have to buy one separately.still, i was shocked at the quality considering the price....

This review is from: Yamaha DGX200 76-Key Electronic KeyboardOK, I haven't tried the Casios that some rave about, but I do know this...the keyboard does offer an adequate volume level (particularly how I play). If you want more volume: 1-Try turning the touch response off. 2-Go into the function menu and turn the M.Volume control UP. I'm certain that the naysayers didn't read into the manual. I admit that there's not a ton of additional sound, but it's set at "104" from the factory and can go to "127" if you choose to. That's because Yamaha has given the unit some "play" so you can raise or lower the sound to match other built-in settings. Also when a "song" is playing there's extra sounds like bass, cymbal etc., so how much can you expect of 12watts, total? 3-Go to radio shack, get the right adapter and plug it in to you stereo (or I've read about some adding inexpensive PC speakers for $30-$60). One or all of the above will do the trick.It's got a great range of voices. The piano sounds great as well as others like guitar, church organ, etc. There's 600 to choose from. I advise the 202 model which will include a sustain pedal, AC power adapter, some 'phones and an extended warranty....

This review is from: Yamaha DGX200 76-Key Electronic KeyboardI've played piano for 13 years now, and got this keyboard to take with me to school. I had been shopping around for about eight months before deciding on this one. Not only is it an incredible deal for 76 keys, but it has beautiful sound. It has nearly 600 voices and can probably do more things than I know about. Built in metronome, headphone jack, right and left hand can be played back separately are what I use most. The keys aren't full sized so it has a different touch than a real piano, which I had expected anyway. I never thought I'd come to like playing on a keyboard, but I'm really happy with this one. I paid $199, got free shipping and it arrived much sooner than I had expected. You won't find a deal like this anywhere else.*Should mention that it doesn't come with an AC adapter. I dug around my closet at home and found one, so it wasn't even a problem....




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