Why Cheap Casios Make Great First Synths

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
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Komentáře • 150

  • @sunnyschramm9650
    @sunnyschramm9650 Před 3 lety +148

    every toy keyboard is a treasure chest with a good effectpedal

    • @jimmyhobbs3216
      @jimmyhobbs3216 Před 3 lety +14

      This. Plus a good chance to practice your soldering skills by putting a 3.5 or 1/4 jack output in.

    • @RetroPlus
      @RetroPlus Před rokem +5

      So true, some reverb really transforms basic keyboards

    • @elhamzawishy
      @elhamzawishy Před rokem +1

      The truest insight i saw this year

    • @itsJoel59
      @itsJoel59 Před rokem +2

      Any tips for good beginner pedals?

    • @ulvessens5902
      @ulvessens5902 Před rokem +5

      @@itsJoel59 Zoom Multistomp MS-70CDR

  • @intuitivecat
    @intuitivecat Před 3 lety +30

    I started making experimental electronic and abstract beat music back in the mid-90’s with a cheap Casio and Yamaha and bunch of guitar effects pedals for modulation, a portable CD player with sound effects and beat cd’s and recording on an old Tascam 424 portastudio. I also had a vcr that had a weird glitch in which it would loop about 2 or 3 seconds of the audio when you pressed pause which was fun to play around with. The best Casio I had (don’t remember the model) had 3 position sliders for all of the rhythm parts so you could change it up and do fills on the fly. Loved that thing.Pretty sure it was some of my most adventurous and creative music I’ve made.

    • @Guacamole1000
      @Guacamole1000 Před 3 lety

      is any of that music of yours on the internet? sounds interesting!

    • @intuitivecat
      @intuitivecat Před 3 lety

      @@Guacamole1000 unfortunately, no. I still have the 4 track cassettes but no longer have a cassette 4 track. Lost previously transferred files when I lost a hard drive. Hoping to get them transferred again soon. Some of my later work which is primarily using a Korg Esx & Roland JX305 can be found on Bandcamp. Same username as here. It’s mostly wandering techy abstract & broken beat inspired rhythm experiments from the mid-late 00’s

    • @Guacamole1000
      @Guacamole1000 Před 3 lety +2

      ​@@intuitivecat just looked it up! Sounds great! Some of your songs give me the Bomberman Hero vibe which is my fave video game soundtrack!

    • @kyriakosxanthopoulos3468
      @kyriakosxanthopoulos3468 Před 2 lety

      Maybe your Casio was the MT 67

  • @Syntox
    @Syntox Před 3 lety +52

    The classic "toy" Casios are getting up there in price...

    • @AdemK47
      @AdemK47 Před 3 lety +9

      And being advertised as “synthesisers” when they’re not.

    • @noahlankford1
      @noahlankford1 Před 2 lety +3

      Actually found one at a used store that I cleaned up turns out they're going for $100+

  • @JoshIsMakingMusic
    @JoshIsMakingMusic Před 3 lety +11

    Heck yeah. I'm all about those cheap synthesizers. Already made a couple vids on an old Yamaha and an old Casio. This was a really lovely video!

  • @irife2771
    @irife2771 Před 3 lety +18

    My first synth was a Roland Juno 106 that I got for a massive price of $300. Its a shame you can't get one for that anymore, its the greatest synth to learn the basics on.

    • @Lamster66
      @Lamster66 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol I paid £110 for my Juno 6 which I sold for £300
      The real killer was back in the day is I sold my CS15 for £50 an SH101 for £50 another one for £80 a Poly800 for £100 with a Siel EX80 expander and had my Vox Continental Stolen. And turned down Gary Numan's oberhiem OB8 for £650.

  • @alabamared2568
    @alabamared2568 Před 2 lety +3

    Just to let you know after watching your videos you and others on CZcams have inspired me im 53 yrs old and disabled I can no longer work. I'm home always soo I thought put my time to good use and learn a new thing..I love electronic music newer like ambient..chill on sirius xm and older deep sounds like Depeche mode. Yazoo ect so just today I picked up my first synth and for what it is and what I paid its a no Brainer I just bought a slightly used casio WK-6600 for 110$ in amazing shape im so lit and can't wait to get started even came with stand and how to books ty for your inspired videos as maybe someday I can also inspire another person!!!!

  • @WoodyAndy
    @WoodyAndy Před 3 lety +7

    Wish I still had my old CZ230s - made so much music on it back in the 80's/90's. Great fun working with it's limited sequencer. Used to run it through an old ZOOM 9000 into a DOD DFX94 then into my Fostex 4-track! Happy days! Nice vid, atb from the UK

  • @NyakzOTSD
    @NyakzOTSD Před 3 lety +1

    I remember when you had 900subs!!! Amazing to see your growth

  • @vprice509
    @vprice509 Před 3 lety +8

    You don't have to go vintage. Yamaha and Casio still make entry-level keyboards. A new one is probably a better first synth, unless you find something cheap or free.

  • @fatkev1983
    @fatkev1983 Před 3 lety +17

    I love some of the older Casio devices. Sadly, they are going up in price. I got a Casio HT-6000 for £50 a year ago. A total bargain and my god, what a fun synth. Also picked up a cute Casio VL1 for £35 - such a tiny fun thing. The last part of my Casio collection is the DG-20... that is one weird bit of kit to use as a MIDI controller. SK1 is next on my list but trying to find one for reasonable money is tough.

    • @chrisbogan402
      @chrisbogan402 Před rokem +2

      Sell me that Casio please 🤣

    • @fatkev1983
      @fatkev1983 Před rokem

      @@chrisbogan402 which one, the HT-6000? No chance, as to replace it it would cost me a lot more than the £50 I bought it for! You can still pick up the HT3000 for ok money.

    • @chrisbogan402
      @chrisbogan402 Před rokem

      @@fatkev1983 I’m just hoping to find a keyboard like that soon 🤞🏽🙏🏾

  • @douglasw.7864
    @douglasw.7864 Před rokem +2

    These portables were such a big deal in the 80’s. Having grown up in the 70’s, even a basic board like the Casiotone CT-101 or 102 would have fantastic to own back when.

  • @ciatangallaghe2485
    @ciatangallaghe2485 Před rokem +3

    A synth is different from a keyboard.

  • @sauermusicDE
    @sauermusicDE Před 3 lety +2

    4:09: The CZ-230S can be programmed via MIDI SysEx! Editor/Librarian software for that purpose is available on the internet. If you want to dump your own creations into the CZ-230S, you have four slots available for that. The preset sounds 96 to 99 will be overwritten.

  • @mattcero1
    @mattcero1 Před rokem +1

    Woman you're cute! But I heard no fridge! You must have your low cut filter engaged on your audio. Keep up the good work and thanks for all the information.I've been binging your stuff.

  • @saulcross9690
    @saulcross9690 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It’s worth knowing that the cz230s has the same architecture as the cz101 and while it appears to be presets only you can edit 4 of those using sysex and an external editor via MIDI. The bulk of the presets on the 230s are really quite nice too.

  • @mwmusic29
    @mwmusic29 Před 3 lety +2

    Several good points made here. Thanks!

  • @fcf8269
    @fcf8269 Před 3 lety +3

    you can use 9V packs on 7.5V although the components internally are running at a different value of current; which considering how cheap those keyboards are, means that you severely reduce their life expectancy. Not a big deal if you run them 30m or 1h every now and then, but for daily usage that is like running a car in 2nd gear in the red RPM zone for miles and miles every day... It works, but it is only a matter of time before it break :)

    • @troycharbonneau8643
      @troycharbonneau8643 Před rokem

      True. I had a Casio mini keyboard, and fried something in it by doing that.

  • @garrettstewart6624
    @garrettstewart6624 Před 3 lety +3

    I love that you’re stoked on the CZ 230. Hoping you can provide some info on sequencing. Thanks!

  • @tomblaze2
    @tomblaze2 Před 3 lety +8

    The Casio and Yamaha starter portable keyboards are great starter instruments. If you really want to advance at playing keyboard it is nice to have a reliable instrument to just turn on - run scales - do your daily practice routine vs. loading up a DAW with a MIDI Controller. I saw my keyboard playing improve quickly this way, and then when I did go to record with my DAW setup or hardware synth setup I was a far better player. These can also be used as a lofi keyboard to record with if you can hunt down 10-20+ bread and butter sounds, turn off the internal reverb and then track into your recorder and add more FX to get a more pro sound there. Makes a big difference to feel a keyboard under your hands with NO latency.

    • @Roboprogs
      @Roboprogs Před 3 lety

      The later Yamaha PSR kb’s have pretty good sound, and USB audio in & out, as well as MIDI. I like the feel on the keys of Casio’s CTK/CTX series more, though, even if the sounds aren’t quite as good (and the USB is only MIDI without audio).
      Last summer I picked up one of the Casio CGPs and it makes a nice 88key controller. To me the feel is similar to the more expensive Yamaha MX88 (or MODX8), and much better than Roland or Korg entry level kbs, but of course the CGP has just a few hundred (actually nice, but non programmable) presets, rather than being a synth. It’s just a ROMpler in the truest sense.

    • @wilsonjaksetic6009
      @wilsonjaksetic6009 Před 2 lety

      I picked up a 1987 Casio HT-6000 for $300 au on the weekend. Not sure about this one, it’s uses traditional analog subtractive synthesis with a twist (not VA).
      It’s got 4 DCOs per voice - with 64 waveforms, sounds very PPG on a good day.with your standard wave forms to ring modulation using
      dco-based oscillators.
      And that’s 4 DCO’s for all 8 voices! This can be split at set amounts of split.
      And of course, 8 vintage analog 24db low-pass resonant VCFs (per voice, eight voices).
      A pretty decent 5 octave keyboard, fully programmable drum machine based on the famous Casio RZ-1 (but extended - patterns and fills can be saved written and recalled, programmed (with the keys and saved)
      last, not leastOh,
      And last but not least, it’s got speakers!!!!
      This is amazing because it seriously made me do a double take and I found it twice before I clicked - it was up on eBay for 8 days at 300au).
      Know how to identify? It’s the only Casio with a Alpha Junko/Waldorf Microwave front spin dial jog spin thing.
      …, oh, and an analog BBD chorus - which sounds, pretty much just like the Roland Junos.
      Dreams can come true - and synth nerds have been sleeping on this for a while. Oh, and it’s got speakers, made me do a double take (it was up on eBay for 8 days at 300au).
      My serial no is 12. Good luck!

  • @davidlancaster1974
    @davidlancaster1974 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Totally agree. Casio make great instruments. Always had a blast with Casio in the 1980s. Forty years later just bought a new Casio model and having so much fun!

  • @frank.medgyesi
    @frank.medgyesi Před 10 měsíci

    As soon as you turned to look at your fridge because it's loud, my fridge turned on at the exact same moment.

  • @Aetila
    @Aetila Před 3 lety +2

    Now the hipsters will buy up EVERYTHING! :-)

  • @unyu-cyberstorm64
    @unyu-cyberstorm64 Před 4 měsíci

    I have a WK-1800, got it for $15 at a thrift store, it is amazing and fun.

  • @StevenRayMorris
    @StevenRayMorris Před 3 lety +1

    Omg that unicorn SK-1 is beautiful

  • @jasonfreedman4264
    @jasonfreedman4264 Před 3 lety +2

    This channel is perfect for me! Just subbed. Keep doin what you're doin

  • @jeffreyheffner908
    @jeffreyheffner908 Před 3 lety +2

    Realistic concertmate was the brand Casio sold keyboards under for RadioShack. They are the same keyboards but usually can be bought for way less than Casio branded

  • @anonymike8280
    @anonymike8280 Před měsícem

    Just get a contemporary 61 key keyboard with MIDI out. I recommend the Casio CT-S1 or the Casio CT-S400. The CT-S1 is for people do not want the arrange features. The CT-S400 is for people who want the arranger features. These instrument are in the $200-$250 price range. They have an "almost" semi-weighted action, velocity keys and good tone. 61-key Yamahas are good too and perhaps cheaper, but the cheaper ones have unweighted keys and no velocity. It gets down to what you can work with, but if you can create using a keyboard and a DAW program, you can work with anything.
    You need a 61-key keyboard because without at least 61 keys, you cannot learn real keyboard skills. Basic keyboard skills are the same today as they were in the 19th Century when all instruments were acoustic.

  • @mescaLEO
    @mescaLEO Před 3 lety +2

    A bit more than one year ago, thanks to one of your videos, i bought my first synth: an Arturia Microbrute.
    Not a good choice to learn how to play, but definitely an excellent choice to learn the basics of music synthesis.
    One year, various synths, and ~8k Eur down the drain later, i am enjoying this hobby as if it was the first day.
    Time to look for a Casio, i guess.
    Thank you.

    • @ToyKeeper
      @ToyKeeper Před 3 lety

      The Microbrute is fun and educational. Some of its features are surprisingly difficult to achieve on other synths though, because it's so dirty and misbehaves a lot. I thought I would get rid of my Microbrute after upgrading, but I'm keeping it around for the things only it can do. It's just so good at nasty, broken, glitchy sounds...

    • @mescaLEO
      @mescaLEO Před 3 lety +1

      @@ToyKeeper indeed.
      Got a Hydrasynth and a bunch of Behringers under my belt (Neutron being the best of all

    • @ToyKeeper
      @ToyKeeper Před 3 lety +1

      @@mescaLEO I upgraded to a Pro 3, and hope to get a Hydrasynth at some point too. It seems like the Microbrute will probably stick around though, since it's too cheap to sell, too small to use much space, and too much fun to let go of. Plus, I got the red version and it's really pretty.

  • @Michael-kn6tl
    @Michael-kn6tl Před 3 lety +1

    For a power source you can use a cell phone power bank and a step up cable to your appropriate voltage of your keyboard. That way you dont have to worry about messing up your keyboard.

  • @Osckii
    @Osckii Před 3 lety +2

    Your content is so dope im mad i just recently found your channel

  • @TheLokiBiz
    @TheLokiBiz Před 4 měsíci

    I'd say a beginner on a budget is way better off getting a $100-200 midi controller with at least 3 octaves (these can also be found for closer to $50 if you're cool with used gear) and then a bunch of soft synths (which can be had for free). You get way more variety in what you can do. Then you can get into subtractive synthesis or FM synthesis or if you prefer you can just use presets.

  • @GhastlyH
    @GhastlyH Před 11 měsíci

    I have a huge collection of Casio keyboards which have all been thrift store finds (it's just as much fun to buy something of eBay as it is to hunt them in the wild). I always find the built in auto accompaniments to be very inspiring for creating new music.

  • @bloodyhell302
    @bloodyhell302 Před 9 měsíci

    I have a real soft spot for "consumer" synths like the CZ230s, MT-400V, HT series and Yamaha PSS/DSR FM keyboards.

  • @ToyKeeper
    @ToyKeeper Před 3 lety +1

    Mini keys are great. Would be nice if more synths had them. It's also nice when synths are designed like desktop modules, but with a tiny set of keys attached, like just two octaves, to allow it to be played when a better keyboard isn't attached. The Microbrute is a good example.

  • @OCEANSINSPACE
    @OCEANSINSPACE Před 3 lety

    Yea, agreed and you can also circuit bend them easily with battery! Keep rocking it.

  • @Semitotal
    @Semitotal Před 3 lety +1

    Estate sales are good for old keyboards, too. Pro tip: bring a power supply or two. I found a Casiotone CT-460 for super cheap because no one could test it to confirm it worked, but I brought a power supply! Works like new.

    • @shaneo2351
      @shaneo2351 Před 2 lety

      Which power supply do you bring

    • @Semitotal
      @Semitotal Před 2 lety

      @@shaneo2351 The CT-460 just happens to use the same power was guitar pedals (center negative 9v) so I brought my OneSpot I had laying around. Just make sure you use the correct voltage and polarity and you're golden.

  • @Flix-f6q
    @Flix-f6q Před rokem

    Midi keyboard and softsynth with either pc or smartphone, more versatile, cheap, powerful

  • @lesperluettedupigeonnier3120

    A year ago I found a Yamaha PSS 21 synth from the early 90s in perfect working order in the trash.
    it sounds great, and these sounds are deliciously lo-fi and tonally just right.

  • @positionnormal
    @positionnormal Před 3 lety

    There is a music keyboard teacher that has a youtube video where he plays Bach prelude on a casio pt87 with a little reverb pedal and it sounds just wonderful.

  • @ClassicTVMan1981X
    @ClassicTVMan1981X Před rokem

    I had both a PT-1 and a PT-10 in the late 1980s.

  • @leftmono1016
    @leftmono1016 Před 3 lety

    Spotted an MT-100, my first ever keyboard. 12th birthday present in 1984. Bought one for £30 last year, love it!
    Keep meaning to sample the analog drums.

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios Před rokem

    Good thing I have two old 1980s Casios.

  • @user-eu3mn6ss5l
    @user-eu3mn6ss5l Před rokem

    Great job! I'm not into these, but I do have a Casio CDP 100 that I gigged with for YEARS! I have a soft spot for Casio.

  • @wilsonjaksetic6009
    @wilsonjaksetic6009 Před 2 lety +1

    I bought a ‘toy’ Casio from 1987 for $300 Aud. It was sitting in the cupboard for years. Screen protector is still on the screen.
    Clearly worth $300aud, but it’s only got 4 DCOs per voice (with 64 waveforms), only 8 analog low-pass VCFs (per voice, eight voices), this crappy 5 octave keyboard, ability to split the keys and play two patches at once, a fully programmable drum machine (patterns and fills can be programmed and saved) and last, not least, an analog BBD chorus - which sounds so average, pretty much just like the Roland Junos. Very underpowered, clearly.’
    It’s the Casio HZ-6000, flagship of the Casio SD line - 4 DCOs w/64 waveforms, ring mod, noise (and an independent noise envelope) plus velocity sensitive DCA and VCF.
    Yeah, it’s pretty crap and obviously super underpowered.
    .
    Congrats! You made it through my attempt to make it sound awful. It’s 10x better than an Alpha Juno - even takes the Roland JX8-P a run for it’s money. Well, you could buy 7 Casio HT-6000’s for one JX8-P… just remember that these things are rare. My serial number is 12.
    Good hunt in’, reply here if you find one! None for sale on the entire web for the last week.

  • @abstractmodule4574
    @abstractmodule4574 Před 3 lety +2

    Sample the fridge! Haha

  • @wreignone
    @wreignone Před 7 měsíci +1

    They are a great choice. You can at least learn music theory! This skill will become invaluable later on. 😊 also funfact, casio used to make calculater watches! They are a great brand.

    • @Steph_7d7
      @Steph_7d7 Před 6 měsíci

      I'm wearing a ca53w right now lol

  • @MasterPoe54
    @MasterPoe54 Před 3 měsíci

    I had 3 big casios, and two of them had the keys that light up which is my keyboard skill level (played Drums since 1980, wanted to try keyboard and guitar), aka Zero. I was broke and pawned them, like a total idiot, along with my Bose headphones and Puch bike they are my biggest regret in stuff that I pawned. Now I can't even find those light up Casio Keyboards at any price. This chick is totally cool, just happened upon these videos trying to figure out how to get sound out of Rockjam RJMK25 keyboard without a computer.

  • @morehumanity
    @morehumanity Před rokem

    SPECIALLY

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 Před rokem

    The only Casios i started with, as a kid in the 90s, were these super noisy ROMpler types and the one i had sadly had a loud swish noise each time you pushed a button. So changing parameters like Tempo for accompanying melodies, volume and the presets, were all tainted by an audible SWISH in the recording but never the less i did record a few things with it because it was still better than having NO keyboard at all. These button sounds, that could not be turned off, was really what i hated the most on these cheaper keyboards.

  • @mapache_al_ataque
    @mapache_al_ataque Před 3 lety +2

    It all started with “cheap Casios” for me. 😎

  • @Individual_two
    @Individual_two Před 3 lety

    Jade, I wondered what happened to you and there you are on Reverb! Cool! BTW, I dug out an old Casio MT-68 that I had stowed deep in one of our closets. I cleaned it up and it works great! I forgot how much fun they were. Take care!

    • @JAdeWii_
      @JAdeWii_  Před 3 lety

      Nice- my friend is borrowing my MT-68, it is fun. Hope all is well, say hi to the mrs. for me!

  • @maria-martina
    @maria-martina Před 3 lety

    thank you !!!!! this was really useful!!

  • @SpinningSpur
    @SpinningSpur Před rokem

    Great information. I have a 9 volt power supply hooked into the 7.5 input on my SK-1 and was wondering if the Casio cared. I own a couple Yamaha’s too pss-270 and pss-470. So fun! All purchased for between $5-$12 at thrift stores

  • @trevor_mounts_music
    @trevor_mounts_music Před 3 lety +15

    "cheap" casios aren't cheap anymore. may as well just buy a real synth imo

  • @aeyde
    @aeyde Před 2 lety

    i have old Roland JV 30 from 90' holy crap it's awesome

  • @TheWriter86
    @TheWriter86 Před 2 lety

    Great video. You’re a very cool person. Thanks for this. I’ve been into synths for a while now and I love spending money on them, though it’s not paying off yet. 😭😭😭😭😭 it will though. Thanks for the inspiration on buying a cheap casio.

  • @pedrongreen
    @pedrongreen Před 2 lety

    I'm actually learning how to play the keyboard with a Casio MT-65 that I found on eBay last week

  • @01kmacias
    @01kmacias Před 2 lety

    I found a Casio CT-360 for $20 that sounds pretty cool. I'm excited to learn on it

  • @devinbrines
    @devinbrines Před 28 dny

    Did you make the outro? Sounds nice

  • @tonywharton5220
    @tonywharton5220 Před 3 lety

    I still have 3 or 4 Casio synths gathering dust under my bed. Unfortunately I don't sell on eBay but I do need to get them gone along with a few old drum machines.

  •  Před rokem

    You made a good point here! I sold my yamaha prs-300 few years ago and kinda regret it now. I didn't know I would like to use polyphony (gear had few faulty keys, but that was the rubber thingies) Well you learn as you make mistakes :(

  • @alexlewis5470
    @alexlewis5470 Před 3 lety

    I miss my MT-40. For a modern cheapkey check out the PSS-A50. Nice velocity sensitive keybed. Several drum kits and a basic sequencer. Yamaha XG-like tones. Lots of voices and an FX insert. MIDI over USB. I've bought a couple for my nieces and nephews as gifts but they would be fine for an adult

  • @androidparanoico
    @androidparanoico Před rokem

    What's better Casio keyboard or synth to make darkwave, goth, post punk etc?

  • @keyhoarder
    @keyhoarder Před 2 lety

    I own many oldschool Casios, but you need research before you buy, because there are many synthesis types, and there are many similar models with the same synthesis and sounds. It's confusing for a newcomer. There is Classic Casio "Consonant Vowel" Synthesis (partly analogue, great warm sound, example: Casio MT 65), which i highly recommend, Sine wave (Casio MT 70), Phase Distortion (Casio Cz), Samplers (Casio SK), and finally samples / wavetables (all Casios after circa 1990). The best is to check sound videos before buying.

  • @swarranjan114
    @swarranjan114 Před 3 lety

    Please make a complete process of making a song without using DAW. Or suggest cheap DAWless hardware for home studio.

  • @kenfusion
    @kenfusion Před 3 lety

    Good vlog as always .
    I would have liked to hear some of your old casios ! . I had the drum pad casio and gave it away (regret) I still have my CTK 611 and is awesome . It has a place in many of my tracks . It sounds amazing through my alesis nanoverb with the chorus/reverb multi effect . I got my CTK 611 for $40 at a pawn shop .(dude threw in a power supply)
    I use it as a midi controller often too .

  • @Pablo668
    @Pablo668 Před 3 lety

    Also, you need a Casio VL-1. It will round out your collection.

  • @abelchristian951
    @abelchristian951 Před 3 lety

    You could also hooked up a Casio to a interface like did
    I have a casio wk-110 that lets you do it the only problem with that Cassio is literally you cannot put samples in but other than that you could Loop your ideas as long as you want on it for $70

  • @Livinglegend621
    @Livinglegend621 Před rokem

    I just got a Casio CTK-2550 for $20 is that good idk but they even labeled the keys which makes learning easier for me

  • @mr_sadicoplays
    @mr_sadicoplays Před 4 měsíci

    Pawnshops know what they have nowadays

  • @ivancorrales8522
    @ivancorrales8522 Před rokem

    Que loco que te gusten los Casio por dónde vivo yo en el sur de Argentina por mucho tiempo fueron los únicos teclados que se conseguían ya que los comercios no importaban otras marcas

  • @Dismitz
    @Dismitz Před 2 lety +1

    What Casio is at 7:56?

  • @gooneybird808
    @gooneybird808 Před 3 lety

    Annnd they make great fun for circuit bending! Haha

  • @RuslanKentawrus
    @RuslanKentawrus Před rokem

    Бля я сижу думаю ща покажет какой звук на синтезаторе а она хру хру Ляля бум бум подпишись говорит на канал😂☝️ очень информативно особенно когда ты английский не так хорошо знаешь и тебе показывают просто отрывками куски синтезаторов

  • @BlezzBeats
    @BlezzBeats Před 3 lety

    SA-10 4 life

  • @smyrnianlink
    @smyrnianlink Před 2 lety

    I recommend a ctx 700 for beginners that can afford it.
    It is a very capable instrument for its price.

  • @itsJoel59
    @itsJoel59 Před rokem

    Today I found my first keyboard in a thrift store. It is a casio PT-380 and I got it for 5$ 😊

  • @Jwnewall
    @Jwnewall Před 3 lety

    Casio MT-70 is my fave, only one or two good soundbanks, but god damn are they snazzy

  • @edbrito-swdev
    @edbrito-swdev Před 3 lety

    So... The minimum we should get is a 49 keys one? 32 and 44 are not really ideal for beginners?
    What about newer casio keyboards? Any other brands that are (easy) to find and are worth it?

  • @Centar1964
    @Centar1964 Před 2 lety

    I got a KORG MicroSTATION for cheap... you can get a synth for cheap if you look.

  • @johnkramer5324
    @johnkramer5324 Před 3 lety

    You deserve more views

  • @97warlock
    @97warlock Před 2 lety

    I had a casio ck1000 I think. sold it like 14 years ago. .... I remember the drum sounds were cheap as hell, but it had the most beautiful grand piano sounds I ever heard AND it had that Octave bend wheel which I love. - SO.... What model or brand would you steer me towards??? Under 150.00

  • @hablalabiblia
    @hablalabiblia Před rokem

    Which model is the one you showed in the case? That is a beautiful one indeed!

  • @PauloCesar-fj6dr
    @PauloCesar-fj6dr Před 2 lety

    Hello, Jade. I am from Brazil.Your chanel is great. I am interested in buying a mini keyboard, but there's not too many options available today. We have the new SA76/77/78 and some Yamaha, but I realized that the old ones are the real good ones. In Brazil I found Casio MA 120 and MA 150. Do you know them? Thanks a lot.

  • @See_Sharp
    @See_Sharp Před 3 lety

    Just get the Yamaha PSS A50, it has everything for modern music production. Unlike the Casio SA 76 which does not have usb midi out.

  • @calibomber209
    @calibomber209 Před 3 lety

    i came up on the sk8 for 20 at the thrift store.

  • @HOLLASOUNDS
    @HOLLASOUNDS Před 2 lety

    I know your promoting dawless but price wise it's best to buy a good midi keyboard and set it up in a daw and then turn the screen off. Why spend thousands on sythersizor when most DAWs have digital synthesizer in them? Reason 12 has about 25 sythersizor and samplers on it.

  • @ardamusaoglu1322
    @ardamusaoglu1322 Před 3 lety

    just this week got my hands on yamaha pss-680, i was surprised say the least, and a very pleasant on. I have a feeling my wallet will be very upset about this video.

  • @jeffreyheffner908
    @jeffreyheffner908 Před 3 lety

    Also I love your sk1

  • @Pablo668
    @Pablo668 Před 3 lety +1

    Yeah, the CZ-101 is a great little synth, but getting a bit spendy, and hard to find!

    • @roterodamus
      @roterodamus Před 3 lety +1

      sold mine for 300 euro's, yeah def not cheap. But it's a quality synth tbh just really cumbersome.

  • @docroxchannel
    @docroxchannel Před 3 lety

    Sharing on my FB Page Doc Rox music and events from the web and my CZcams playlist keyboards !!

  • @Lamster66
    @Lamster66 Před 2 lety

    Lol the CZ101 IS a synthesizer

  • @aking9832
    @aking9832 Před 3 lety

    My wallet thanks you.

  • @kikilane7164
    @kikilane7164 Před 2 lety

    Looking for one with input to plug in to small amp - in a 4 part harmony group doing AM 70’s pop for sting lines, horn lines, a nice piano sound… which is the best smallest one?

  • @sarbajitghosh5244
    @sarbajitghosh5244 Před 2 lety

    It makes a lot of sense what she said

  • @Manu-em6ed
    @Manu-em6ed Před 3 lety +1

    sure it is very cool to get these things at a good price. But what I don't get is people complaining about synths that cost 200-300$. I mean, its an instrument. Ask a violin player what the entry price is for them. 200-300$ is pretty low price for an instrument

  • @massebassepearpung
    @massebassepearpung Před 2 lety

    Check out Casio HT-series. It´s a nice analogue synthesizer in a cheesy package. :-)

  • @jdub630
    @jdub630 Před 3 lety

    Cool.👍

  • @chikoavena3407
    @chikoavena3407 Před 3 lety

    They're expensive as a used synth in my country :c

  • @djgreenhornet2892
    @djgreenhornet2892 Před 2 lety

    What do you think about buying a Casio WK-200 for my first keyboard? I’m looking into buying one. I had a chance to buy a Casio Casio SA-75 at a thrift store but it was broken. lol

    • @JAdeWii_
      @JAdeWii_  Před 2 lety +1

      Not familiar with that model, but $200 is a bit steep

    • @djgreenhornet2892
      @djgreenhornet2892 Před 2 lety

      @@JAdeWii_ WK-200 was $89 with the stand and stool. I decided not to get it. I went back to the store to check it out. The SA-75 was $10.