Korg M50-73 Digital Keyboard Workstation
The Korg M50 takes much of the M3’s sonic power and packs it into a lightweight, value-packed music workstation! Whether you seek natural-sounding acoustic instruments or hard-hitting synthesizer sounds, Korg’s M50 puts a sonic world beneath your fingertips. You can easily navigate between sounds and get tweaky with its generous effects section using the Korg M50’s brain-dead really simple and interactive touchscreen and four multi-function knobs. Available in 61- and 73-key synth-action styles and as a full, 88-key RH3 Graded Hammer Action keyboard, take the best of Korg – to go – with the killer Korg M50.
Product Features
- The essence of the M3 distilled into a compact and affordable “on the go” workstation!
- 80 voice polyphony, 61-key new Natural Touch semi-weighted keyboard, TouchView display. Uses the same EDS (Extended Definition Synthesis) as the M3 for superb sound
- 256 MB ROM, with plenty of new samples including 4-way acoustic piano, new electric pianos, clavs, and more!
- Includes Manual, Power Adaptor & CD-ROM
Beautiful Sounds – Way Too Complex to Operate I really like the sounds and feel of this keyboard. But the user interface is nearly impenetrable.I am tech savvy and have owned several digital keyboards in my life, but this one is beyond me. Even the simplest operations – like splitting the keyboard and controlling the volume of each side – require several non-intuitive steps through the complex touch screen interface. After almost an hour trying and email advice from tech support, I still can’t get a drum track to play in…
Beware the keypad. I decided to buy this keyboard instead of Roland Juno Stage, because of the many features it has. After 3 months of using I’m oscillating between the extremes of love and hate. The resources are awesome. The voices are great, and as a workstation the keyboard is powerful. This is the love side. The hate starts when you try to play piano music on it. I can’t understand how the famous Korg was able to build this awesome equipment, with that horrible keypad. It seems the engineers at Korg never…
Beware of signal issues