UK Pianos.co.uk      Add To Favorites     |    Join me on Join me on Twitter        Call - 020 8367 2080

Piano Home |Check out the new piano forum - get answers to any piano questionAsk a Piano Question |Sell Your Piano Here | Forum | Piano Lessons | Contact Us


Digital Pianos | Upright Pianos | Grand Pianos | Teachers | TunersRemovals | Reviews | Articles
 

Keyboard Workstations

A keyboard workstation is piece of electronic musical equipment providing the facilities of:

 

a sound module,

a music sequencer and

(usually) a musical keyboard.

It enables a musician to compose electronic music using just one piece of equipment.

 

 

The sound module is generally a sample-playback synthesizer. The concept of a sequencer combined with a synthesizer is not entirely new - the Sequential Circuits Six-Trak provided this already in a crude form. All parts of it were purely based on subtractive synthesis; so no preset drum kits, a thing every sample-playback synthesizer since the Roland D-50 featured.

 

However, the incarnation of the idea reached its maturity (and a boom in sales in the truest sense - 250,000 sold, the most a synthesizer ever did!) with the Korg M1. Besides just a sequencer, it also provided a large enough display, a vast array of sounds (with the woody Piano sound and the "Universe" patch being the most famous), and built-in effects. Floppy disk drives were included on later machines, making it easy to store the sequencing data (either as proprietary or Standard MIDI File format).

 

Nowadays, workstations have evolved to the point that they can either include a DSP-based synthesizer upgrade (Korg MOSS board for Trinity and Triton workstations, Yamaha AN-PLG and DX-PLG plugin boards), more multisamples and preset-memory locations(Roland JV/XP and SRV/XV series expansion boards, Korg EXB-PCM expansion boards, various Yamaha PLG-boards) and even a complete sampler (Korg sampling expansion for the Trinity) or a possibility for treating audio via the external inputs (Yamaha VH-PLG plugin board).

 

The Big Three (Yamaha, Roland and Korg) have sampling now as a default option in respectively the Motif (ES), the Fantom (S/X) and the Triton. They have a relatively big screen to give a comprehensive overview of the sound, sequencer and sampling options (since the display is one of the most expensive components of these workstations, Roland and Yamaha chose to cut back by not using a touch screen display, and in case of Yamaha not even a high-resolution display). The screen replaces what would otherwise be a lot of extra rotary knobs, sliders and buttons, which add a lot to the cost of the machine, make the operation look unnecessarily complex, and generally aren't used in the first place.

 

The sequencer stores events like notes and controllers (like pitch bend), and then replays them into the sound generator, which then makes the music.

 

Although many keyboard workstations have a keyboard, this is not always the case. In the 1990s, Yamaha, and then Roland, released a series of portable keyboard workstations (starting with the Yamaha QY10). These are sometimes called Walkstations.

 

The concept of the keyboard workstation mutated around 1996 and gave birth to the groovebox - a key-less version of a workstation, still with a self-contained sound source and sequencer, mostly aimed at dance. Again, nowadays they also feature a sampler. Roland more or less started the hype, and Yamaha, Korg and E-mu followed suit. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_workstation

Browse
Roland Workstations

Related categories
Synthesizer Keyboards
Keyboards

NO ADSENSE ACCOUNT SELECTED FOR
GOOGLE ADSENSE

 

 Free Piano Lessons Here!

Learn To Play Piano For Free

"Your piano course is the best I've ever had! The explanations are easy and straight forward. I really appreciate your willingness to assist me in learning to play the piano effectively, and I thank you for the extra lessons you promised to send."

Patricia 


"I am a 70 year old pensioner just starting out. Your piano lesson "Does age matter when learning piano" certainly fits me a treat!"

Michael. J Norris. Leicester. UK


"I have enjoyed reading your lessons and going through them, it made me realise that I am not too old to learn."

Best regards, Kath

More comments


Click here to get your free piano lessons.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital Pianos
Yamaha
Roland
Casio
Kawai
Classenti
Korg
Suzuki
Gem
Upright Pianos
Kemble
Yamaha
Kawai
Grand Pianos
Kemble
Kawai
Yamaha
Used Piano Market
Uprights
Grands
Digitals
Keyboards
Sell Your Piano
Piano Rental
Used Pianos
Piano Accessories
Keyboards
Piano History
Piano Makes
Digital Piano Makes
Piano Movers
Piano Shops
Piano Teachers
Sheet Music
Piano Tuners
Free Piano Lessons
Play Piano By Ear
What Our Customers Say

UK Pianos Newsletter

Free Piano Advice, Info, Tips, Secrets, Buying, Selling, Valuing

You Get...

~ONE TIME offers

~Piano buying advice

~Reviews/Comparisons

~Tips on moving pianos SAFELY so you don't damage your floor, furniture OR WORSE - your back!

~Practice tips/secrets

~Piano lesson reviews

~Advantages & disadvantages of private or online lessons

Learn How to:

~Value your piano

~Get the best deals

~Find out the best piano to learn on (upright, grand or digital?)

~Choose the right piano

~Find the best places to sell your piano

~And much more...

Get your FREE Newsletter here:

Type Your Email

We hate spam as much as you! Your information will not be given out to anyone
under ANY circumstances. You can un-subscribe at anytime.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Our Customers Say

Dear Graham

Thanks again for the very honest, knowledgeable and impartial advice for confused parents (but music lovers) like ourselves. Many thanks again for all the support and advice.

With regards

Dr A Maitra
MBBS, MRCP, MRCPCH, MMedSci
Sheffield, UK


Dear Graham Howard,
 
"Many thanks for your article 'digital pianos - which brand should I buy?'. It was really useful to get an insight of the quality and prices of different brands of digital pianos."

Rami Al Ashi


"I'd just like to say thank you for the E-mails you've been sending me. Some of them were really helpful and informative."

Many Thanks, Gaz

More comments...