X
Xdrummer
New member
I think a general question like - what's the best keyboard is too broad.
It depends on what you need it to do. If the user comes from an acoustic piano background - then a weighted feel and good piano sounds are important. If synth sounds/pads are more important - then a weighted feel is not as important.
If using sample libraries is important - then the keyboard may need sampling ability - however, if only software sounds will be used - then a keyboard with a lot of MIDI controller features is more important.
I don't like to eat up my computer with a ton of software synths/samples (samples can be very hit or miss and you can spend a lot of money building up a good sample library) - so I choose to depend on two main keyboards. One has 88 weighted keys and good acoustic piano sounds (and that is all I use it for) the 2nd keyboard is 61 keys with about 1,000 internal sounds (with a lot of the main sounds I need - organ, brass, strings, etc.) - it has a couple of expansion slots if I choose to add a another library or sounds and fairly deep sound editing options- and while it is designed as a "performance keyboard" it has decent MIDI controller features.
I'm not convinced there is one single keyboard that can meet all the needs (as an example - playing organ riffs on a weighted keyboard does not feel right at all - and playing piano without weighted keys significantly compromises technique).
If I had to limit myself to one keyboard - it would be a DX7 (used to triger other sounds/samples). While the DX7 sounds were limited......it had a good feel that even a piano player could live with.
It depends on what you need it to do. If the user comes from an acoustic piano background - then a weighted feel and good piano sounds are important. If synth sounds/pads are more important - then a weighted feel is not as important.
If using sample libraries is important - then the keyboard may need sampling ability - however, if only software sounds will be used - then a keyboard with a lot of MIDI controller features is more important.
I don't like to eat up my computer with a ton of software synths/samples (samples can be very hit or miss and you can spend a lot of money building up a good sample library) - so I choose to depend on two main keyboards. One has 88 weighted keys and good acoustic piano sounds (and that is all I use it for) the 2nd keyboard is 61 keys with about 1,000 internal sounds (with a lot of the main sounds I need - organ, brass, strings, etc.) - it has a couple of expansion slots if I choose to add a another library or sounds and fairly deep sound editing options- and while it is designed as a "performance keyboard" it has decent MIDI controller features.
I'm not convinced there is one single keyboard that can meet all the needs (as an example - playing organ riffs on a weighted keyboard does not feel right at all - and playing piano without weighted keys significantly compromises technique).
If I had to limit myself to one keyboard - it would be a DX7 (used to triger other sounds/samples). While the DX7 sounds were limited......it had a good feel that even a piano player could live with.