buying and learning on a digital piano
Questions on learning to play the piano, and piano music.
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buying and learning on a digital piano
Post by wilton-cox »
I am considering buying a digital piano to learn to play. I have looked at the Roland HP series which is exactly like a piano with pedals etc, and the Yamaha DGX 620, a new model which has lots that I can use to help me learn.
I am 60 and have not learnt an instrument or learnt to read music before. Is my age or lack of experience going to be a problem?
Has anyone any advice, or any experience of these?
I am 60 and have not learnt an instrument or learnt to read music before. Is my age or lack of experience going to be a problem?
Has anyone any advice, or any experience of these?
Michael
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Post by Gill the Piano »
I realise that, as a man, you are easily seduced by bells and whistles on things, but have you considered getting a real piano? You'll get a far better idea of touch and tone- production.
As an adult beginner, you'll need application and PATIENCE. And don't be too hard on yourself...no, it won't sound like what you hear on the wireless, and it ain't going to for a while...but don't get discouraged and despondent. Just keep plugging away. Whilst you won't pick it up as quickly as a kid, you'll have the intellect to know that, if you apply yourself, you will get there in the end. Good luck!
As an adult beginner, you'll need application and PATIENCE. And don't be too hard on yourself...no, it won't sound like what you hear on the wireless, and it ain't going to for a while...but don't get discouraged and despondent. Just keep plugging away. Whilst you won't pick it up as quickly as a kid, you'll have the intellect to know that, if you apply yourself, you will get there in the end. Good luck!
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Hear, hear! (or is it here here!) A touch sensitive, progressively weighted digital for you my good man. 6 hours a day of Burgmuller Studies, Arpeggios and Scales!!Gill the Piano wrote:I realise that, as a man, you are easily seduced by bells and whistles on things, but have you considered getting a real piano? You'll get a far better idea of touch and tone- production.
As an adult beginner, you'll need application and PATIENCE. And don't be too hard on yourself...no, it won't sound like what you hear on the wireless, and it ain't going to for a while...but don't get discouraged and despondent. Just keep plugging away. Whilst you won't pick it up as quickly as a kid, you'll have the intellect to know that, if you apply yourself, you will get there in the end. Good luck!
But if electronic organs were still all the fashion in the Northern Hemisphere, - would you still be asking over a piano, or an organ? If you would be leaning towards an organ then probably, in all fairness, a keyboard would be more fun for you. Yamaha DGX, Casio WK3700 - all great fun. For complete beginners don't dismiss a 'keylighter' either. You'll never play the Bosendorfer at the Ritz or wherever, but you'll get very fast results and a lot of personal fulfilment. After all, making music, (by almost any means) is a higher form of activity.
But there again - I'm only a 'newbie' here
(wilton-cox - just got it!)
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