Yamaha PSR-550

The Yamaha PSR-550 is a portable arranger workstation electronic keyboard produced in 2001.[1][2]

Yamaha PSR-S550
ManufacturerYAMAHA corporation
Price$700.00
Technical specifications
PolyphonyParaphony
TimbralityMonotimbral
LFOSine
Synthesis typeDigital
FilterDigital
AttenuatorADSR envelope
Aftertouch expressionNo
Velocity expressionYes
Storage memoryList preset
EffectsChorus, Reverb, Harmony
Input/output
Keyboard61 keys
Left-hand controlPitch bend
External controlMIDI

Features

It features 713 sampled sounds, professional sounding DSP effects, 112 accompaniment styles, nine demo songs, a floppy disk storage drive, and a solid touch-responsive keyboard action. There's also a pitch bend wheel, and Bass-Boost stereo speakers. This keyboard was the first to utilize the "Sweet" and "Cool" voices, which would later be seen in the Yamaha Motif series, and higher-end keyboards like the PSR-2100 and Tyros series. The "Sweet" voices are sampled instruments meant to capture the natural sounds of the instruments, while "Cool" voices reflect the sounds of electric instruments as they were heard through vintage amplifiers and effects.

Controls placed to the left of the built-in LCD screen include DSP controls, touch-sensitivity, an alternate method of implementing sustain, and harmony and echo settings. The 550 was also the first keyboard to utilize a wide, easy to read, multi-color-changing display, which cycles between blue, red, and purple depending on operator activity. It was also the first keyboard to feature the Music Database system. The built-in floppy drive allows compositions to be saved, as well as the ability to download numerous new songs and keyboard configurations from the Internet. Additional controls include a toggle for auto-accompaniment, a tap-based tempo setting button, a transposition feature, and a rapid way to access the user's favorite presets. The Multi Pads allow drum sounds or short melodies to embellish user songs. The user can even record their own phrases for the Multi Pads.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.