- Electronic piano
An electronic piano is a
keyboard instrument designed to simulate thetimbre of apiano (and sometimes aharpsichord or an organ) using analog circuitry.Electronic Piano was also the trade name used for
Wurlitzer 's popular line ofelectric piano s, which were produced from the 1950s to the 1980s, although this was not actually what is now commonly known as an electronic piano. Electronic pianos work similarly to analogsynthesizer s in that they generate their tones through oscillators, whereas electric pianos are mechanical, their sound being electrified by a pickup.Most electronic pianos date from the 1970s and were made in
Italy , although similar models were made concurrently inJapan . An exception is the range of instruments made by RMI in theUSA from1967 to approximately1980 , which became one of the more popular electronic pianos used by professional musicians. Most electronic pianos (including the RMI) are not velocity sensitive, in that they do not vary their volume based on how hard or soft the keys are played, like an organ.Electronic pianos became less popular in the 1980s when the
digital piano and polyphonicsynthesizer became available and affordable enough for both professional and home use as an inexpensive, smaller and lighter alternative to an acoustic piano. The triumph of the synthesized piano first came in 1982, with the development of theKurzweil K250 ; today, synthesized pianos have attained a remarkable level of realism.External links
* [http://www.yamahamusician.com Yamaha Musician] - Digital piano and keyboard enthusiast site
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