Dynatone Digital Piano

US calls only (954) 559-9553



Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Digital Piano Function Series: The Values and Three 'T's

Greetings!

On today’s posting, I would like to discuss the “values” that governs some of the interesting and versatile utilities of our digital pianos. Such utilities include that of three ‘T’s - Transpose, Tune and Touch. Each of these are set to a numeric value which represents a certain degree of said feature; the key to which the instrument is currently transposed, or the extent that the piano responds to the strength (velocity) with which its keys are struck, respectively.

The act of Transposing in music, by its definition, is changing the key of an existing piece of music into another key, retaining the exact materials but on a different pitch level. The purpose of transposing mainly is to accommodate the range of a singer by moving its range; it also is done often in instrumental music in order to facilitate easier playing by moving the music to a key that is more natural to the instrument. Also, for inexperienced musicians who have trouble reading scores with many sharps or flats on the key signature, the music is often transposed into keys with fewer sharps or flats like C major. Digital pianos today offer transposing capabilities to any keys, allowing the players to change the key of the music without necessitating changing and re-learning of fingerings, which can sometimes be a pronounced advantage.

The tune feature is in a way similar to the transpose – in the sense that making a change to its value alters the pitch level of the instrument - but, unlike the transpose, which moves the pitch by a completely noticeable half step, the tune alters the frequencies of the notes ever so slightly – by units of cent. It is precisely the tuning that you hear players of strings and other instruments do every time prior to a performance, whereas pianos are tuned mostly by piano technicians. Of course, for obvious reason the digital piano requires few maintenance, if any, but the tune feature becomes another advantage of being a digital instrument when the instrument is used as a part of an ensemble that also includes acoustic instruments, in the sense that the acoustic instruments, tuned by hands and ears rather than machines, may not necessarily be terribly precise on matching the regular A=440 system.

The last on the list, the touch allows the players to adjust the way the piano responds to the velocity with which keys are struck. By setting the touch value to Soft, a player can produce loud sound out of the piano without having to play it forte. Vice versa, with the touch value set to Hard, the player can conjure beautiful soft lines of melodies out of the instrument with relative ease, since the notion of requiring larger force to produce louder sound allows for more delicate control of dynamic. A unique setting of “None” may be also applied, in which case the piano becomes completely insensitive to the playing strength of the fingers, resulting in equal and consistent volume of all notes that are played. More advanced models offer more detailed adjustment of Touch, dividing it into 9 degrees of different response levels.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Digital Piano Function Series: The Reverberation & Effect


The Reverb


Providing the user with an everyday concert hall. That is, basically, the ultimate goal of the reverberation feature of our digital pianos. It seeks to reproduce the resonance effects of a performance space, from the most casual dinner settings to the most prestigious and sound-abundant concert halls. Because it is, unlike all others that create unusual conditions that my not be achieved in acoustic instruments, designed based on real acoustic resonance - stuffs that actually happen in acoustic instruments - the reverberation is initially set active by default in many products.

Most of Dynatone digital piano models do allow their users to choose from a maximum of eight types of reverberation, depending on any desired performance spaces that the players may wish to recreate. The players, of course, also have the option to turn off the reverberation altogether, in case they wish to get the ‘secco’, or dry sounds out of the instrument.


The Effect

While referred to as the ‘effect’ here, the last on our firsthand list has been also often called the ‘chorus’ on many products, more so on keyboards. On Dynatone products the term effect is used more frequently, since what it does is not exactly attaching a ‘chorus’ to the voice in the traditional sense, but really adding a thick layer of voice effect that serves to enrich and deepen the sound of the chosen voice. Among the available types of effects, some are indeed named ‘chorus’ and their sounds allude to that, but others can be, well, quite different.


On most Dynatone models, eight types of effects are available. Unlike the reverberation mentioned above, the effect is not initially turned on by default - it's not a part of acoustic instruments.