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First Keyboard for a 14-Year-Old

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Comments

  • edited June 2019

    @ExAsperis99 said:

    @Lady_App_titude said:
    I was about 14 when I started to teach myself keys (already been playing drums + guitar by that age), and this was my first keyboard, a Wurlitzer Model 140B.

    That's fantastic. Were you in Young Marble Giants, by any chance?

    Sorry, I don’t know what that is, but we were young. We were into prog rock and fusion.. Before long, I traded up the old Wurly for a Rhodes Suitcase 73, replacing what I then perceived as embarrassing tan and wood for slick black tolex, like the cool cats, our heroes Herbie and Chick, played. I still miss that old 140B, however... I’ve had recurring dreams over ther years about finding it in my parents basement, all covered in dust.

    Sorry to hijack this thread with my trip down memory lane..
    I don’t know what I would choose as a starter axe in today’s world. I will offer this one comment, which is the keyboard action is the main thing, and it can vary considerably, and is something you can only know by getting to a store and laying hands on. A lot of the more budget-friendly models these days have terrible, stiff action that could present a real challenge for a beginner. Last time I was in a store and trying out keys, I found NI, Arturia, and Akai had the best action. You used to be able to trust Roland or Yamaha implicitly, but in recent years I find they skimp on key quality with the budget models, and only the high end models have decent action.

  • What put the Yamaha in the lead? Some features or the sound demos?

  • edited June 2019

    this one was pretty good value for money in the 90's...

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