jitteringjim
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Everbody knows that "real pianos" suck big time. I don't know how they've lasted as long as they have.
They're difficult to tune, hard to get into the trunk of a car for a gig, and they have way too many keys. I mean, who needs all of those damn keys?
Throw in those annoying dampers and hammers and that stupid little "stick" you have to use to prop open the "lid" (which IMO only serves as eye candy,) and you have a hell of an engineering nightmare.
You know, I've never had to worry about a coffee cup ring on my Casio, and if I drop it down the stairs I can usually superglue (or duct tape) it back together. Try that with a "real" piano.
You know, I could rant all day about this. Anyway, my point is that any engineer who knows his stuff can mic the little speaker on my Casio with like an NT-1 or something and you'd never be able to tell the difference.
Robbie, get a Casio dealership deal before it's too late!

They're difficult to tune, hard to get into the trunk of a car for a gig, and they have way too many keys. I mean, who needs all of those damn keys?
Throw in those annoying dampers and hammers and that stupid little "stick" you have to use to prop open the "lid" (which IMO only serves as eye candy,) and you have a hell of an engineering nightmare.
You know, I've never had to worry about a coffee cup ring on my Casio, and if I drop it down the stairs I can usually superglue (or duct tape) it back together. Try that with a "real" piano.
You know, I could rant all day about this. Anyway, my point is that any engineer who knows his stuff can mic the little speaker on my Casio with like an NT-1 or something and you'd never be able to tell the difference.
Robbie, get a Casio dealership deal before it's too late!
