Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Yamaha YDP-181 Arius Home Digital Piano Review


!±8± Yamaha YDP-181 Arius Home Digital Piano Review

If you are looking for the perfect digital piano that can accommodate both to beginners and experienced players alike, the Yamaha YDP-181 Arius Home Digital Piano is the piece that you are looking for. Providing a true piano sound and feel, the YDP-181 has become an easy favorite among all other digital pianos in the market. With its Graded Hammer keyboard, the YDP-181 is a very enjoyable piece to play with, both in practice and performance. On top of that, its 3-level AWM Dynamic Stereo Sampling voices produces authentic sound quite remarkably.

The Yamaha YDP-181 Arius does not only gives a playing pleasure, it also provides a recording convenience. It uses a USB device port for storing songs recorded on any instrument. It has a damper pedal that features half-damper effect, providing a shaded yet expressive control over any sustained note. The YDP-181 also has a Dual Voice capability, which means that you can play two different instrument sounds all at the same time. Not only that, it also has an on-board 2-track song recorder that allows you to record you original music ideas and performances during practice or during a live, actual performance.

Actually, the Yamaha YDP-181 is the replacement for the Yamaha YDP-223. That being said, most would think that the YDP-181 has some large shoes to fill. However, based on the YDP-181's specifications, I am confident that it can do an admirable job. What with its updated piano features such as a dynamic stereo sampling, a 128 tone polyphony, a 2-track 3-song sequencer, a damper resonance for fuller and richer sustained tones, as well as its USB-to-DEVICE port.

YDP-181's Graded Hammer (GH) keyboard features an extra key sensor capable of reproducing fast, repetitive playing of one note and with perfect articulation. Aside from having the same key accuracy response with traditional acoustic pianos, its matte finish on its black keys add to the keyboard's overall appeal.

While most digital pianos quickly run out of notes during fast, dense legato hits because the sustained notes are cut off as the instrument skips notes to make room for the newer notes, the YDP-181 can tolerate more than a few notes held together. Thanks to its 128-note polyphony, you now have a maximum of up to 128 notes that you can play at one passage.

And if ever your grow tired of playing or of practicing, the YDP-181 can humor your listening cravings with its 50 different piano songs. These recordings were specifically chosen both for their beauty and their functionality. And since most of these recorded songs are classics, a student can easily benefit from it by listening to it during breaks.

A simple yet powerful piano that is perfect for both the student and the professional - no other digital piano can get better than that. So go and try the Yamaha YDP-181 Digital Piano today.


Yamaha YDP-181 Arius Home Digital Piano Review

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