First Digital Piano - NEED ADVICE!
Posted: 10 Jan 2010, 01:35
Hi all,
Firstly, this forum is great - there is a wealth of information here that cleared up a lot of my initial questions! However, I still need a bit more help
I am looking to buy my first digital piano. I used to own a Steck acoustic player piano, but had to get rid of it due to moving into a smaller place. So, I'm trying to buy a digital piano to replace it, and try to keep the neighbours happy at the same time!
I am a beginner, who's never had piano lessons before. I play guitar pretty well and know quite a bit of musical theory, and having tinkered around on the piano before, I feel I'll be able to pick it up fairly quickly, so I want to buy something that will last me as long as possible (not something cheap that I will outgrow within a couple of years). I don't want to buy something "to see if the piano is for me" - I know I will be sticking with it, so I want to buy the best thing possible first-time round. I will eventually want to take grade 8, so something that will last me until then would be the best!
I've heard the Yamaha Clavinova CLP series is the way to go, but can anyone offer any better suggestions? My main priorities are:
Price: £2,000 as an absolute maximum, but ideally around the £1,500 mark (obviously the cheaper the better, but it seems to me that price and quality are highly correlated )
Sound: as close to a good-quality acoustic concert grand as possible, both through headphones and the internal speakers
Feel: as above - this is the most important thing for me, as I don't want to reach grade 5 for example, switch to an acoustic piano again and end up struggling because the digital piano I learned on felt too dissimilar to an actual piano. The action needs to be identical to an acoustic piano, if possible.
Features: not really a priority (hence looking at the CLP series rather than the CVP) - I don't want thousands of voices, as I'll only be using the piano ones
Looks: again, not really a priority
I've been looking at the CLP series in more detail, and it seems that you get what you pay for, but I'm trying to decide just how much money the extra features are worth as you progress through the range.
The CLP-330 has the Graded Hammer 3 keyboard, which I think I will need for the best feel. I think this pretty much throws the CLP-320 out of the equation. I'm not sure that synthetic ivory and natural wood (i.e. the CLP-340 upwards) will make much of a difference. Can anyone suggest otherwise?
The CLP-380/CLP-370 are too much money I think, but would it be worth going for the CLP-340 over the CLP-330 to get 4 dynamic levels rather than just 3, stereo sustain samples and key-off samples?
Comparison of the CLP-320, CLP-330, CLP-340, CLP-370 and CLP-380 here: http://uk.yamaha.com/en/products/musica ... are&page=2
Looking at this, the CLP-340 seems to be the best all-rounder to go for, given that the prices of them all are:
CLP-320: £842.25
CLP-330: £1,150.62 (extra £308.37, mainly for Graded Hammer 3 keyboard and aux in/outs)
CLP-340: £1,388.48 (extra £237.86, mainly for synthetic ivory keytops, an extra dynamic level, stereo sustain samples, key-off samples, a split function, LAN connectivity and better speakers, which seems like a fair enough price hike to me!)
CLP-370: £1,585.44 (extra £196.96, mainly for Natural Wood white keys, which I don't think is worth nearly £200 extra)
CLP-380: £2,899.52 (extra £1,314.08, that I won't even try to justify )
Any advice as to which digital piano in the CLP range to purchase would be greatly appreciated. Also, if anyone could suggest other pianos in a similar price range that would be suitable (perhaps even better value for money!) I'd welcome their input.
Many thanks in advance,
Tom
Firstly, this forum is great - there is a wealth of information here that cleared up a lot of my initial questions! However, I still need a bit more help
I am looking to buy my first digital piano. I used to own a Steck acoustic player piano, but had to get rid of it due to moving into a smaller place. So, I'm trying to buy a digital piano to replace it, and try to keep the neighbours happy at the same time!
I am a beginner, who's never had piano lessons before. I play guitar pretty well and know quite a bit of musical theory, and having tinkered around on the piano before, I feel I'll be able to pick it up fairly quickly, so I want to buy something that will last me as long as possible (not something cheap that I will outgrow within a couple of years). I don't want to buy something "to see if the piano is for me" - I know I will be sticking with it, so I want to buy the best thing possible first-time round. I will eventually want to take grade 8, so something that will last me until then would be the best!
I've heard the Yamaha Clavinova CLP series is the way to go, but can anyone offer any better suggestions? My main priorities are:
Price: £2,000 as an absolute maximum, but ideally around the £1,500 mark (obviously the cheaper the better, but it seems to me that price and quality are highly correlated )
Sound: as close to a good-quality acoustic concert grand as possible, both through headphones and the internal speakers
Feel: as above - this is the most important thing for me, as I don't want to reach grade 5 for example, switch to an acoustic piano again and end up struggling because the digital piano I learned on felt too dissimilar to an actual piano. The action needs to be identical to an acoustic piano, if possible.
Features: not really a priority (hence looking at the CLP series rather than the CVP) - I don't want thousands of voices, as I'll only be using the piano ones
Looks: again, not really a priority
I've been looking at the CLP series in more detail, and it seems that you get what you pay for, but I'm trying to decide just how much money the extra features are worth as you progress through the range.
The CLP-330 has the Graded Hammer 3 keyboard, which I think I will need for the best feel. I think this pretty much throws the CLP-320 out of the equation. I'm not sure that synthetic ivory and natural wood (i.e. the CLP-340 upwards) will make much of a difference. Can anyone suggest otherwise?
The CLP-380/CLP-370 are too much money I think, but would it be worth going for the CLP-340 over the CLP-330 to get 4 dynamic levels rather than just 3, stereo sustain samples and key-off samples?
Comparison of the CLP-320, CLP-330, CLP-340, CLP-370 and CLP-380 here: http://uk.yamaha.com/en/products/musica ... are&page=2
Looking at this, the CLP-340 seems to be the best all-rounder to go for, given that the prices of them all are:
CLP-320: £842.25
CLP-330: £1,150.62 (extra £308.37, mainly for Graded Hammer 3 keyboard and aux in/outs)
CLP-340: £1,388.48 (extra £237.86, mainly for synthetic ivory keytops, an extra dynamic level, stereo sustain samples, key-off samples, a split function, LAN connectivity and better speakers, which seems like a fair enough price hike to me!)
CLP-370: £1,585.44 (extra £196.96, mainly for Natural Wood white keys, which I don't think is worth nearly £200 extra)
CLP-380: £2,899.52 (extra £1,314.08, that I won't even try to justify )
Any advice as to which digital piano in the CLP range to purchase would be greatly appreciated. Also, if anyone could suggest other pianos in a similar price range that would be suitable (perhaps even better value for money!) I'd welcome their input.
Many thanks in advance,
Tom