🎶 Elevate Your Performance with Yamaha's CP73!
The Yamaha CP73 is a 73-key stage piano featuring balanced hammer action for an authentic playing experience. It offers a selection of 10 premium piano voices, including three grand pianos, two upright pianos, and five electric pianos. With real-time controls for effects and seamless sound switching, this stage piano is designed for professional musicians seeking versatility and expressiveness in their performances.
E**E
So many good sounds but heavy as a beast
I wanted a keyboard with great acoustic and electric piano sounds, and this is it. Many more options available to it than I thought, such as XLR outputs, a Damper Resonance feature and the ability to play both an acoustic and electric piano sound at the same time.I’m a beginner/intermediate player and think the action is pretty good— my previous keyboard was a Yamaha P-115. This feels much better but the wood feel to the black keys will take a little getting used to.Now for the bad news. I’m a 64 yo woman who had a stroke in January 2021, and this puppy is so heavy I could barely get it from the floor onto its new stand. I was worried I would damage it, but all is well. I’ve got the 73 key model on back order and am looking forward to making an A/B comparison of the two.Now I have to find my old expression pedal so I can add a wah to the mix. Item arrived on time and in good shape. I don’t gig but unless the 73’s keybed blows I’ll probably swap this out for it. Old ladies need to not be messing with heavy things.
I**.
Keyboard is amazing
I e every feature on this keyboard. I especially like the transpose feature so I can play in the key I want to play in & be in the same key as my worship band.
A**R
Loses weighted key feel
I bought this keyboard for a church worship team of volunteers. We wanted a few different sound that are easy to access. For that I give this a 5 star. In face I recommended it to other churches who didn't want to spend Nord amount of money and didn't need anything more that a few nice sounds - strings, pads...We have had it for 2 and a half years and now they keys that get played often feel like a cheap keyboard with springs instead of weighted keys. They even click now loud enought that when I make a voice memo recording for my team you can hear the keys clicking. For the cost, it should have lasted much longer.
M**U
High quality pro keyboard SP88
This keyboard has high quality solid keys. The sound is excellent. The person I brought it for figured everything out in 15 minutes. I connected it to a Bose radio input which works great. This replaced another supposedly high quality brand keyboard which had cheap hollow keys which three of quit working. At least, with this one you get what you pay for.
T**S
Great out of the box, but fragile build becomes a problem
I’m a classical concert pianist. After 5 months of daily practice, this board starting getting clunky, especially the black keys on their way up. It kept getting worse. Yamaha replaced the action kindly, but the problem started again after a few weeks.It’s actually a pretty fragile instrument, unsuited for heavy or regular playing. For $2500+ I had hoped for something that would last longer.The sounds are great but not any better than a good VST. The acoustic piano sounds are fine. The only place it really shines are the Rhodes and Wurli sounds.Overall, disappointed and would not recommend. More of a hassle than anything due to the mediocre build quality and limited features.
D**R
Excellent selection of realistic piano sounds
I found the piano sounds to be quite realistic - the C7 sound is very close to playing a real C7 grand for example. The upright sounds remind me of playing a Yamaha upright. CP80 sound is so much like the sound I heard in the 80's from my CP80.Found it fairly straight forward to learn - lots of buttons and knobs - no touch screen. Was immediately able to create performance patches - still haven't read the manual! Need to do that someday.
J**A
Versatile keyboard for live performance
There is mostly good news and a little bit of bad news with Yamaha's latest and greatest digital stage piano. The way the piano is designed, there are three "pods" with separate sounds and separate parameters. Pod 1 has acoustic pianos and an Electric Grand; Pod 2 has electric pianos and the clavichord sound; pod 3 has strings, choruses, organ sounds, bass patches, vibes and other mallets, synth sounds, and everything else.Each set of pods has it's own set of paramaters. So, for example, the "phaser" parameter is available for the electric pianos (but not the acoustic pianos, where it's not needed); likewise the "Leslie" effect is available for the organ sounds but not in any of the other pods.The knobs and switches give the piano and old-fashioned feel. (I'm a little worried about how sturdy they are and how likely they are to break off.) Unlike some other digital pianos, this one has fewer sounds (like trumpet or sax) that I'm never going to use. The concentration on real keyboard sounds and ones that one is likely to use in performance helps a lot.This piano, unlike most high-end Yamaha digital pianos, also does not have a built-in speaker. That makes the piano lighter than it would be with a speaker, but obviously not suitable for situations where you just want to bring a piano and nothing else.Pro's:- Excellent electric piano sounds- Very exacting control over parameters- An actual Leslie effect (set the foot controller to 76 to make a pedal work).- The ability to save "live" pages and change patches on the flyCons:- Uneven patches (especially the bass patches)- Slightly disappointing piano patches- One cannot combine patches in the same pod (like vibes and bass, for example)I'm a little surprised at the uneveness of the patches, especially the bass patches. (I've had other Yamaha pianos where the bass patches were great, so I know Yamaha can deliver in this area.) The organ patches, as with most Yamaha organ patches, are underwhelming. However, there is one patch (click organ) that combined with the Leslie effect is good enough to use in performance, so that one doesn't have to bring a separate dedicated B3 emulator.My own experience with Yamaha has been that there equipment is very sturdy, lasts for a long time, and is generally free from any manufacturing defects. I won't be able to prove that with this keyboard for a while, but that's been my experience with every other Yamaha keyboard.But for some of these limitations that I've described above, I would give this keyboard 5 stars. Still, a very good keyboard for live performance.Update on the CP88: as I feared, the piano is relatively fragile and hard to fix. The piano sustained some damage to a few of the knobs and switches during the latter portion of the pandemic, but proved to very hard to fix. Firstly, it took months and months to get parts shipped from Japan. Secondly, it turns out that the piano is very hard to disassemble, and my piano tech had a very hard time keeping it all together. Long story short, make sure that you preserve the many knobs and switches as best you can.
J**D
playback amp is extremely important!!
this is a good feel and great keyboard, but be sure your amp will support it. Otherwise you just have a keyboard that you cannot hear.
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