The dream comes to an end, for now......
Dec. 11th, 2005 10:29 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The K2500S was driven to the local FedEx-Kinko's and is now awaiting pickup on Monday evening, where it will be returned to the seller.
It was a great machine, and I wish I could have kept it. But it was too big for my loft area (but not the car), too heavy to tote, and (most importantly), R said "No".
Maybe someday in the future, I'll have the room for it, the budget for it, and R's okay to buy one.
In the meantime, I looked at two Casio keyboards. No piano action on the keyboard, preloaded and prearranged songs (ick!), and too lightweight for me and my playing style. In short, "toy keyboards".
It was a great machine, and I wish I could have kept it. But it was too big for my loft area (but not the car), too heavy to tote, and (most importantly), R said "No".
Maybe someday in the future, I'll have the room for it, the budget for it, and R's okay to buy one.
In the meantime, I looked at two Casio keyboards. No piano action on the keyboard, preloaded and prearranged songs (ick!), and too lightweight for me and my playing style. In short, "toy keyboards".
no subject
Date: 2005-12-11 03:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-11 04:25 pm (UTC)I ask, because the pro-audio store that I deal with periodically gets used gear and does mail order.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:21 pm (UTC)My keyboard criteria:
- 61 keys (5 octaves) minimum.
- polyphonic (so I can play more than one note at a time)
- velocity-sensitive (the harder I strike the key, the harder the sound) -- pressure sensor a plus
- weighted keys (i.e. piano action instead of organ action)
- lots of preset "classic" keyboard sounds (piano, Rhodes electric, Hammond B-3, clavinet, harpsichord, celesta, combo organ, etc.)
- programmable sounds (so I can set up a sound and save it in memory)
- MIDI-compatible (can record key hits as MIDI files and play them back)
- portability (so I can take it to house filks and filk cons)
- relatively lightweight (heavy enough to take hard pounding, but light enough for one person to tote)
- sampling (the ability to record and playback sounds) is a plus
- relatively inexpensive ($500-$1000)
The Kurzweil met all of the criteria, except for the weight (the instrument was 50 pounds, and so was the case), size (even though it had 76 keys -- a little more than 7 octaves -- it dominated my loft work area), and cost (it was originally $1399, which I can't really afford right now since I'm not working and still relying too much on the plastic money).
Kurzweil (and Moog) are to keyboards as Lexus is to cars, or as Harley-Davidson is to motorcycles. It's high-end, professional-quality gear, not cheap strictly-amateur toy-quality gear. I've admired them since the mid-1980s, when their first model came out.