I'm bored in lockdown - aren't we all?
Been seriously thinking of getting an digital piano - learned to Grade 2 when I was about 8 but gave up (I'm 53 now). But I've always been able to tinkle a tune a bit and vamp some chords / play a little bluesy solo when the chance arises. Having thought further, I doubt that I'd have the application to learn from scratch again, wouldn't care to learn to read music (which I can no longer do) or practice classical pieces so don't think £500+ is a worthwhile investment for a decent digital piano.
So...
Came across this little Reface thing earlier and although its tiny, as far as I can tell its very playable and would allow me to pump out some Supertramp and Billy Joel (assuming I can learn them, of course) for shits and giggles. Always loved the Fender Rhodes sound and this seems to do it well.
Anyone any experience - specifically with the mini keys. Did it feel like a toy?
Thanks, in advance
Comments
Decisions...
The Reface units are definitely not toys. There are a lot of synths with mini keys - and the Reface ones are among the best. All3 Reface units are decent for what they are and sound great.
They are however basic, and they are minikeys. There are other synths with minikeys for not much more that do a lot more IF minikeys arnt the problem. There are basic workstations/pianos etc with full sized keys for not much more either.
If its something you will use as a tool longer term - Id say find something that would cover all - or most - of your needs/goals (which may actually be a reface of course). If its for something to play with and learn stuff on during lockdown - the Reface wouldnt be a bad bit of kit to do that on.
Your never going to be able to play piano on one though......
Not sure I want to learn piano as much as learn a few songs to amuse myself and I think I prefer the electric piano sounds for what I want to learn. Good to know they aren't considered toys - I'm pretty much new to keyboards, so that's helpful.
Decision is whether to buy an 88 key digital piano which might not get a massive amount of use and will still take up a fair bit of space, or go for the smaller reface type unit for a bit of fun.
Any suggestions for potential other minikey synths would be welcomed though - definitely more into the vintage electric piano / hammond type stuff than pads / saw waves etc. If there's something under the £400 mark that would do both well, please let me know - Yamaha MX49/61 perhaps?
Thanks again
You could look at a Roland DS 61 - a bit more than the MX61 new but if you found a used one might fit the bill. More to it - and quite versatile... but it may be spending more just to spend more. Might provide a longer lifespan before you want to move up a tier.... but you may never feel the need to do that so??
Im primarily a guitarist (though Ive always had a workstation of some sort around since the late 80s) - but wanted to learn piano as I approached 50 (2 1/2 years ago). I spent a lot on a Roland RD2000 - basically because the keybed was fabukouse and the sounds (to my un piano trained ear) were nicer and fuller than most sampled boards.
A lot of investment..... but it led me down the keys route - and I knw have an FA07 as well (which Im already looking at switching for a new Fantom 7) along with a dedicated organ module, and 2 synth modules (a Novation Peak and a Virus Ti2) - and again Im looking at a DSi synth as well.
Despite having many £1000 locked up in my guitars and rig.... Ive barely touched them in 18 months. I almost have to force myself lol.
The thing about keys is playing a raw piano sound is just so much more soothing and all encompassing than guitar - and when your board of that a button push gets you into organs, and another gets you lost in evolving atmospheric stuff. Theres always something to learn in either technique, or sound design whatever your mood.
Im actually considering selling all but 2 of my guitars to fund more key/synth related stuff. Its very engrossing.
I think you would be doing well to start with a CP and then in theory you could just add a MIDI controller later if you want full-size keys and use the CP as a de facto tone generator.
@Whitecat - yes, very tempting coz the demos sound fantastic. Decisions, decisions....
Choice is basically Reface CP, MX49 or a digital piano at this stage - budget is around £400 ish so don't have the funds to splurge on a keyboard amp just yet.
Deal done on a Reface CP (Cheers!). Wish me luck
You could for instance get a pure synth with full sized keys (37, 49 or 61 key) to dig into synthesis - and use that keybed to drive the CPs sounds for your piano/organ/EP stuff.
Should have it quite soon so I'll update on my thoughts. It looks perfect for what I want right now.