Hi Daniel, Thanks so much for being willing to check all this out :) I must admit I felt a little swamped by all the specs and such, so I'm glad for the extra pair of eyes, forgive the pun, to look at this stuff with me. I'll await your opinion with regards to the psr , and I certainly won't write off the mox yet, they're both excellent boards I believe :)
Florian 2013/5/5, Daniel Romero <[email protected]>: > Hi Florian, no worries! If you're not looking for anything complex, > then the PSR would be great for you. Yes, the MOX, just like the > motif, is all about tweequing your sounds and doing lots of adjusting > to have a nice mix. I do believe that the MOX also records to USB > storage, so you wouldn't be losing out on that. I will look up more > information on the PSR you're interested in. Since the MOX is the baby > brother of the Motif series, it does not have sampling capabilities. > So you're correct, you wouldn't be able to download expansion packs > for the MOX. I've read all over the place different things about the > poliphony on the MOX. On some sites I've seen 64 note and on other's > I've seen 124... I know... Weird huh? Anyway, if you're sequencing you > definitely need more than 64. It would start giving out on you really > quick with all the effects and such. Seems like you're leaning more > twoards the PSR which is another great board from what I read in the > past, but I will look up videos and let you know what I think , if > anything. I do own a Motif XF6, which I'm done paying off this month. > Lol IT made my wallet cry, but it was a great investment. Thanks so > much for hearing me out. > > On 5/5/13, Florian-achtige <[email protected]> wrote: >> Hi Daniel, >> >> I take it you have used/owned either one or both of these keyboards? >> I currently own a very meager yamaha psr-290, so any of these 3 would >> be a giant leap upwards. Here's what I found regarding the two >> yamaha's, I'd be grateful if you could check my statements for >> validity :) >> >> PSR s750: >> - Expandable: styles and voice packages can be downloaded for the >> board, which I believe you cannot do with the mox. >> - traditional approach: I got the idea the psr still uses the concept >> of styles and accompaniments, while the mox works a little >> differently, focusing on individual parts and linking them together to >> eventually create songs. This looks more powerful, but also more >> complex. >> - The mox has the ability to allow for incoming mic signal processing, >> for example to vocode it onto another voice. I believe the psr does >> not do this, or only the s950 does. >> - The mox appears to be more focused on being able to tweak your >> voices to the smallest detail while the psr s750 is more bread and >> butter with somewhat less editing capabilities when it comes to that. >> - I believe the psr has double the poliphony, if I remember off the >> top of my head. >> - Lastly, I believe the PSR can record to USB storage while the mox >> cannot do this. >> >> These are some jumbled impressions of what I found reading reviews and >> watching video demo's. You say the song and performance modes and such >> are very accessible, how does that work? Do you have a menu layout of >> some kind for these? >> >> Sorry for my many questions, I wish to know as much information as >> possible before making my choice. I want to invest in an instrument I >> can still count on in 5, maybe 10 years :) >> >> Florian >> >> 2013/5/5, Daniel Romero <[email protected]>: >>> Hey! I'm a Yamaha snob. So the first two choices I would definitely go >>> for. Particularly the first one. The first one is the baby brother of >>> the Yamaha Motif XS series. That keyboard both as a workstation and a >>> controller is fantastic. You have top of the line sounds, and if >>> blind, the sequencer both in song mode and in pattern mode are very >>> accessible. So if you just wanted to sequence something on the >>> keyboard, you can without plugging the keyboard up to the computer all >>> the time, swift through 20,000 sounds to find the one that fits your >>> project and deal with the fact that you just lost your idea. Plus, you >>> can edit your sounds in realtime, and you have performer functions as >>> well like split and transpose right at your finger tips. At the end of >>> the day it depends what you're looking for. If you're looking for a >>> keyboard to do everything with, which includes producing/sequencing >>> music and performance capabilities, the MOX6 is a great board to go >>> for. You have the 1500 sounds that the XS series had, an accessible >>> sequencer, and over 6000 performances to play with. >>> If you just want something simple and with many features for >>> performers/aranging, then the PSR would be good for you. Think about >>> your options, what you're trying to do with the keyboard and how will >>> it help you in future projects when you start getting into heavy duty >>> tasks. >>> Good luck, and keep us informed. >>> >>> On 5/5/13, Florian-achtige <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> I am hunting for a new keyboard at the moment and have narrowed it >>>> down to three possibilities that do what I want: >>>> - yamaha MOX6 >>>> - yamaha psr s750 >>>> - roland BK-5 >>>> >>>> I have no idea about how they play, how accessible they are, what I >>>> can do and cannot do on these machines, so here's hoping some of you >>>> may have experience with these who can give me some pointers on what's >>>> good and bad about them when you are fully blind. >>>> >>>> Thanks a lot in advance, >>>> Florian >>>> To unsubscribe or change list options, see http://lists.andrelouis.com >>>> >>>> for archived list posts, see >>>> http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] >>>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Daniel C. Romero >>> Bergen Community College '14 >>> Host, imager, and producer, The Dan ShowLive >>> Cell: 973-842-1600 >>> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/djdan567 >>> Twitter: @Djdan567 >>> To unsubscribe or change list options, see http://lists.andrelouis.com >>> >>> for archived list posts, see >>> http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] >>> >> To unsubscribe or change list options, see http://lists.andrelouis.com >> >> for archived list posts, see >> http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] >> > > > -- > Daniel C. Romero > Bergen Community College '14 > Host, imager, and producer, The Dan ShowLive > Cell: 973-842-1600 > Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/djdan567 > Twitter: @Djdan567 > To unsubscribe or change list options, see http://lists.andrelouis.com > > for archived list posts, see http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] > To unsubscribe or change list options, see http://lists.andrelouis.com for archived list posts, see http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]
