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The piano is an example of a velocity-sensitive keyboard instrument. The piano, being velocity-sensitive, responds to the speed of the key-press in how fast the hammers strike the strings, which in turn changes the tone and volume of the sound. Several piano predecessors, such as the harpsichord, were not
However, where the Mirage could assign at most two different samples to sections of the keyboard, the SDP-1 has multiple samples distributed across the keyboard. [2]: 3 [3] It has a 76-key keyboard (longer than the Mirage), with a weighted, velocity-sensitive action. [4]
Has portamento, pitch bender, three reverb effects, velocity sensitive keyboard. CT 888 2002 73 full MIDI CT 6000 1985 61 full 20 8 in/out 8 tone effects, pitch bender wheel with full octave range, velocity sensitive keyboard. [56] CT 6500 1986 61 full 48 8 MIDI 3 tone effects, modulation wheel and other features. [57] CTK 50 1995 49 full 100 8 ...
The keyboard features a velocity-sensitive keys with adjustable sensitivity setting, a total of 482 instrument sounds including stereo-sampled piano and Yamaha XG soundset, a set of 106 different auto-accompaniment rhythms, built-in lesson system for practicing, stereo bass reflex speakers, as well as over 100 built-in songs.
The M1 features a 61-note velocity- and aftertouch-sensitive keyboard, 16-note polyphony, a joystick for pitch-bend and modulation control, an eight-track MIDI sequencer, separate LFOs for vibrato and filter modulation, and ADSR envelopes. Data can be stored on RAM and PCM cards. [7]
The SY22 has 61 (five octaves) unweighted velocity sensitive keys with aftertouch. It can play back up to 32 voices or 16 notes. Each sound programme uses two or four voices. There are two different programme configurations, being either one AWM (Yamaha's PCM technology) and one FM element (voice) or two AWM and two FM elements. There are sixty ...
MIDI (Module, In only; keyboard, In/Out), USB The Waldorf Blofeld is a synthesizer combining virtual analogue synthesis with wavetable synthesis and FM synthesis. It is available as a small desktop unit and as a 49 key velocity and aftertouch sensitive keyboard version.
Ensoniq ESQ-1 is a 61-key, velocity sensitive, eight-note polyphonic and multitimbral synthesizer released by Ensoniq in 1985. It was marketed as a "digital wave synthesizer" but was an early Music Workstation.