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Circa 2017, Italian artist Modula released an EP called 780's Chronicles, recorded primarily using a Yamaha PSS780. [5] Cyril Hahn uses a Yamaha PSS380 in his original compositions, and notes its noise profile as an endearing characteristic.
Genos series (The successor series to the Tyros and the original PSR-SX series) Genos (31 August 2017) Genos2 (15 November 2023) Oriental Arranger Workstations. PSR-A1000 (2002, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-1100) PSR-OR700 (2007, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-S700) PSR-A2000 (2012, Oriental model and black version of Yamaha PSR S710. And the ...
Yamaha PSR-S900, a portable keyboard; See also. 900s (disambiguation) 900 series (disambiguation) including 'series 900' This page was last edited on 9 ...
Yamaha's sound sampling technology introduced in the 90s. As of 2014, AWM has evolved to generation two and is usually termed AWM2 or AWMII. Frequency Modulation Yamaha's sound modelling technology used in Electones from the 70s to 90s. The final model to feature FM technology is the EL900 and all its variants. Keyboard Percussion
Large 2MB ROM. No MIDI dump or sysEX. Elaborate sequencer but no way to store. This was released a few months before the CTK-750. Casio was being sued by Yamaha over FM synthesis patents. There is some mystery around the keyboard and its synth capabilities. CTK 1100 61 full 100 12 AA (x6) [118] CTK 1150 61 full 100 12 AA (x6) [119] CTK 1200 61 ...
The Yamaha Tracer 900 (FJ-09 in North America; MT-09 Tracer in Japan, South America, Australia, and New Zealand) is a sport touring motorcycle first offered in 2015. The 3-cylinder crossplane engine comes from the MT-09 (FZ-09 in North America).
Yamaha XSR900 is a neo-retro [2] [3] standard Universal Japanese Motorcycle (UJM), [1] which uses an 890 cc (54 cu in) transverse inline-triple engine. Introduced in 2016, the XSR900 is derived from Yamaha 's MT-09 (known as FZ-09 in North America).
The Yamaha CS2x is a sample-based synthesizer released by the Yamaha Corporation in 1999. The CS2x is designed for maximum real-time control, according to Yamaha. It is the successor of the very successful Yamaha CS1x. Enhancements include 64-note polyphony, a bigger sample ROM, a 24 dB/oct LPF/HPF filter and a two-band EQ per part/layer.