What are the differences between a regular piano and a electric piano?!


Question: What are the differences between a regular piano and a electric piano!?
Like the sounds and how it's handled!. Thanks!.Www@Enter-QA@Com


Answers:
There are quite a few differences between an electic and a regular piano, it depends on the application of it!.

Electric pianos, though they have gotten significantly better over the years, sound more synthetic than a regular piano!. also, with many modern electric pianos you have the option of having different timbres; you can make your keyboard sound like a saxophone for example!.

With regular pianos, this may be my personal opinion, but i feel are much more emotional!. Mainly because you have greater control over the dynamics!. When you press the key softly on a regular piano, it will play softly, if you hit it hard, it will play hard!. with an electric piano it typically doesn't matter how hard you hit the button because it will play at the same volume with the same dynamics!.

For recording, electric pianos are usually easier, they usually have a plug that you can hook into, whereas with a regular piano you'd have to use a microphone to pick up the piano's sound!.

Electric pianos are typically cheaper as well!.

Regular pianos typically feel better on my finger tips, mainly because i know just how emotionally i can play on a regular piano, and how electric pianos kill my dynamics, thus shatter the emotion that the piano was emitting


Hope this helps, sorry if some of it doesn't make sense!.

Note - when i say electric piano i mean a keyboardWww@Enter-QA@Com

Acoustic pianos are mechanical, and many have speculated that the soundwaves generated by a piano are the most complex of any instrument!. Many electronic keyboards use samples of piano recordings to emulate the sound of the real thing, but while they may get closer as technology improves, I doubt they'll ever get it exactly right!.

An electric piano is an entirely different animal, though!. They are electromechanical by nature, and aren't actually intended to sound like an acoustic piano!. There are different approaches to how they are made, giving them distinct sounds from each other!. The Rhodes, for instance, uses metal tines that give it a somewhat bell-like quality!. They're usually good for jazz!. The Wurlitzer is another classic electric piano sound that's more edgy, and sounds great in so many genres from rock to country to electronica, and many more!. Another example is the now cliche-ish sound of the "New Tines" sound from the Yamaha DX7 which involves the manipulation of sine waves!. Yamaha also made another great electric piano called the CP80 which was essentially a small acoustic piano, at least mechanically!. It was sort of the piano equivalent of an electric guitar, in that the strings are real, but it uses a guitar-like pickup to amplify the strings!. also a unique sound!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

Simple answer:

Acoustic pianos - generate sound by felt hammers striking specifically tuned strings!.

Digital pianos - generate sounds by playing back recorded "samples" of acoustic pianos!.Www@Enter-QA@Com



The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007 enter-qa.com -   Contact us

Entertainment Categories