Yamaha CP300

Yamaha CP300

Introduced in 2006, the Yamaha CP300 offers almost identical specifications compared to the P250 it replaces. However, the primary sounds have been significantly improved, [ [http://www.keyboardmag.com/article/yamaha-cp300/oct-06/23624 "Keyboard" magazine review] ] including emulation of "half-pedaling" effects. The addition of "C" in the name is an homage to the mid-1970s CP series of electric stage pianos. [ [http://www.yamahasynth.com/products/cp300/index.html Yamaha CP300 product page] ] Other improvements include the addition of 5 sliders for real-time parameter control, a transpose button, and balanced output via XLR connectors.

The Yamaha CP-300 has 88 graduated weighted keys. This means that the keys are somewhat heavier on the low end than the high. It has onboard stereo speakers, as well as an output for PA usage. Yamaha digitally sampled in stereo each key at multiple attack intensities to obtain the tonal quality, presence, hammer and damper noises of an acoustic piano. The harpsichord (including pick noise), pipe organ, and other sampled instruments in main instrument set were also sampled. The extended instrument set of more than a couple hundred instruments are generated rather than sampled. The MIDI interface can control other instruments or be controlled. It also has onboard digital recording and editing capabilities. Like other stage pianos, it is built for touring.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Yamaha P-250 — digital piano The Yamaha P 250 is a digital stage piano. It was announced in mid 2003 as a replacement for the P 200 and went to market shortly thereafter. The P 250 features various stereo piano samples, plus hundreds of other MIDI, General MIDI …   Wikipedia

  • List of Yamaha products — A list of products by Yamaha Corporation. Musical Instruments Acoustic musical instruments Upright pianos * M1 * M450 * M475 * M500 * P22 * P600 * T116 * T121 * U1 * U2 * U3 * U5Grand pianos * GB1 * GC1 * GC1FP * GC1G * C1 * C2 * C3 * C5 * C6 *… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”