The Hit Music Studio is a South Florida Music School on a mission to better our student's self-esteem through music. Specializing in piano, voice, guitar ukulele, and drums, students at The Hit learn current hits while receiving complete music education. Our unique method has proven to be successful since 2007 years as we continue to strive to be the best music school possible both in our two locations and online. www.thehitmusicstudio.com West Davie Location:954-990-7977 / 11340 W. St. Rd 84 Davie, Fl 33325 Pines Location: 954-432-39-00 / 17035 Pines Blvd Pembroke Pines Fl 333027
I have the E373 and its without a doubt a great Piano. But if you are really serious about learning the Piano, you will outgrow it pretty fast. You will eventually miss playing the deeper and higher notes. If i had the chance again i would start with a 88 keys piano for a little bit more money.
Thanks for the input! I’m not a singer and using the vocal track could get the video removed from RU-vid. This songs the chords and pretty straightforward so I believe most people that like the song would have a relative easy time finding their placement in time
My son turns 10 in one week. Just this past month, he showed some incredible musical aptitude out of nowhere on my keyboard, so I got him this one. I'm super excited!
Guitar is harder at first, but easy once the foundation is acquired. Piano is easier at the beginning, but more challenging later. You're correct. Anything worth learning is worth putting in the time and effort. The fun and joy comes later.
Hey I’ve never played piano a day in my life but just moved into a new place and found this keyboard how probable is it I can learn anything from this type of keyboard
You can learn a lot on it! If it works you can still get started with some of the basics as in the first months of playing pretty much any keyboard will be enough. I have a beginner course you can take that is free. I don’t think that keyboard is worth to buy especially if someone has an extra $50 and can go to other options that are going to last longer but if you got it for free use it to get started. www.thehitmusicstudio.com/offers/dQFFAmL3/checkout
Hey I am doing this song as a solo at my next concert on June 4 I have been singing for about a year do you have any tips for like control sometimes I find myself losing breath on the higher notes?
There is a great exercise with a metronome to expand your breath control. Put the metronome at 60 or lower and do 4 counts breath in then 8 eight breath out. Then increase the time you breath out to 12 counts and then 16 counts. It over time allows you to control better how you release the air. Just take breaks as it is easy to get exhausted and even dizzy. Hope that helps
Thank you! And you are right I try to do videos that are not too long but I could do a part two with the next section! Truly appreciate the feedback. Hope the video helped!
I enjoyed the presentation, but you miss a key feature of this keyboard, it is an arranger keyboard. If you press the ACMP button you get an entire accompaniment with drums, chords and bass in every style with a 2 variations. If you don’t press it, will sound like a drum machine like I heard in the video. The difference for a beginner is you get the effect of an entire band that follow your harmony that you specify with the chords that you are playing. I discovered this only because my music teacher told me, I wasn’t aware of it, and this opened me a new addicted world of arrangers 😊
Hi thanks for the review. I purchased one similar to this one and im thinking of returning it since i dont really like the defualt piano sound. Do you have any recommendations for keyboards around this price that have a good piano sound and also a 3.5 headphone jack?. Also would you recommend a 61 key keyboard for beginners or would you recommend just going with an 88 key one?
Thanks for your comment. I really like the Yamaha e373. 88 key are not necessary and I think all Yamahas have the best piano sound available. I know it’s a bit more money for the 373 but I do believe it is worth the extra dollars
@@thehitmusicstudioThank you for the quick response, I'll check it out. I'm very new to keyboards but I've seen online that you can connect some of them to your computer and run some program to tune the sound to your liking. Is that avaliable on this board aswell?
The keyboard in the shot is a Nord Electro 5 but you are listening to a Roland JDXI connect via midi out of the shot. the drums are from an app called super metronome
Recording is pretty basic. You press on button and whatever keys you pressed will be played back but not exactly with the rhythm that you played them. It’s a super cheap keyboard and it is very durable. My son has dropped it from multiple heights and even stepped on it and it still works fine.
I’m starting to have problems with my ew300 one of the keys starts to not work but if I turn it off & power it back on again it works only had the keyboard for about four years now & already it starts to have that issue very frustrating
That is definitely a problem. I was able to successfully fix one of my keyboards by opening it and replacing the key that had an issue but it is time consuming and nerve wrecking. If you have a technician that could take a look it might be an easy mechanical fix. If it is an electronic issue it might not be worth having it fix. I think Yamaha is pretty good about helping customers with issues so maybe a dealer could give you better info on how to get it fixed
When I bought mine, it came with an instruction dvd for learning musical notes and playing piano,...I haven't fully used it yet but now that I am semi retired, I plan on learning musical note finally, knew some music when I was a kid in school taking guitar. I like the organ sound on this model, it would be cool to play the bac toccata. I had even purchased later a casio sa77 to see if there is a difference, ...I believe there is only a slight difference in several built in tunes. I have a larger casio keyboard I bought used I can progress on later.
Very good I’m not clear on the four key settings should the keys become harder and softer as you change the settings Or is it just the response to the keys that changes Kind regards Graham
Yes. Essentially you have four ways the keys respond to volume. I believe it is fixed ( no response, same volume) soft, medium and hard. You can experiment with them but I like to have my students used the fixed setting for 3 to 6 months and then start using the medium setting. Hope that helps and that it makes sense