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Introduction
It used to be simple; you could say, I play the piano
or I play organ.
That was pretty much it. Through the last few decades, thanks to technological advances, the world of keyboards has exploded. Now so many options are available that when you press down on those familiar black and white keys, any sound may come out. A small portable keyboard can have the sound of a nine-foot concert grand piano, and that baby-grand-piano-looking instrument can produce the sounds of a full orchestra and a rock band to boot! Anything is possible in the world of electronic keyboards today, and you don't have to rob a bank to get a single keyboard that can do what took cape-wearing rock stars a circle of gear to do in the late '70s.
And therein lies the reason behind Keyboard For Dummies. No one has adequately tackled this subject, explaining what all the keyboard options are and how to choose and use them. When I was approached to write the book, the task was more than a little daunting. I know the subject matter well; my whole career has been in keyboards — playing them, teaching with them, developing and marketing them, and enjoying them. But this field is such a wide area to cover, from simple little toys up through a wide variety of home and stage keyboards. So my goal is to make technology easy to understand, clearly explain the many types of keyboard available, and help you dive in and use and enjoy the features of these various instruments. I have only two requirements for covering an instrument in this book:
It has the aforementioned black and whites keys
It has a power cord or runs on batteries
Show me those two things and I'm in.
About This Book
Keyboard For Dummies makes sense of this wide world of electronic black-and-white-key instruments. I explain all the types of keyboards available today, grouping them into logical categories. You gain a basic understanding of how they work, what each is good for, and how to choose the right one for your needs.
I cover the basics of music so I can share some playing tips, and I introduce the fundamentals of synthesis so you can tweak your sounds and effects when you need to. You get into the basics of computer integration and even discover how to play songs by ear. My goals are to make things clear, interesting, informative, unintimidating, and most of all, fun! I don't care what type of music or which keyboard family is your favorite. I try not to let my personal taste color any of my writing. Though perhaps my age slips through now and again; I can't try to be any younger (or older) than I am.
Covering such a wide array of keyboards and topics means that not every chapter relates to your specific needs. Keyboard For Dummies is written so you can dive in to any chapter that interests you; you don't have to read it from front cover to back. In particular, you can skip over shaded sidebars and anything marked with a Technical Stuff icon. These bits are interesting but provide more information than what you absolutely need to know to understand the point at hand. But I think that if you're interested in keyboards, you'll find every chapter of some interest to at least expand your horizons about the possibilities that are out there.
Reading is all well and good, but I'm talking about sound and music here. I love this quotation, often attributed to comedian Martin Mull: Writing about music is like dancing about architecture.
I couldn't agree more, so I provide plenty of online audio examples that take the words and concepts in this book and translate them into sonic reality for you to absorb and enjoy.
Within this book, you may note that some web addresses break across two lines of text. If you're reading this book in print and want to visit one of these web pages, simply key in the web address exactly as it's noted in the text, pretending as though the line break doesn't exist. If you're reading this as an e-book, you've got it easy — just click on the web address to be taken directly to the web page.
Foolish Assumptions
I've made some assumptions about who you, the reader, are. If any of these is true about you, this book is for you:
You're a beginner to music, keyboards, and technology and want guidance from the ground floor up, including tips to help you purchase the right keyboard for you and use its features to the fullest.
You're a good pianist who wants to explore keyboard technology.
You just love music and keyboards.
You're a parent or other adult shopping for a keyboard for a child and need suggestions on what types and features are best for youngsters to practice with.
You're curious and want to learn.
Icons Used in This Book
Throughout the book I use icons to help break up the text and to draw attention to points I'm making. Here's what each icon means:
This icon highlights helpful info that will enhance your keyboard skills. It may be a shortcut or another way of doing things. Think of it as a friend, adding to the information at hand.
This icon identifies important tidbits you should squirrel away for later use.
Potentially damaging or dangerous issues carry the Warning icon. Take them seriously.
At times, I go into greater background detail than what you need to grasp a basic topic, and I use this icon to identify that extra information. It isn't essential reading, but gives you a deeper understanding of a subject.
I've sprinkled a lot of audio examples throughout the text to bring all the subject matter in this book to life. When you see this icon, it indicates that you can find an online audio track related to what you're reading about.
Beyond the Book
In addition to the book content, you can find a free online Cheat Sheet that includes a glossary of common keyboard terminology, a helpful list of must-have and good-to-add accessories, and a who's who of keyboard companies. Go to www.dummies.com/cheatsheet/keyboard to access this handy reference material, and then print it out and keep it by your side when purchasing, studying, and playing your keyboard.
You can also access additional free articles that cover information I simply couldn't fit into the book. You'll find information on sixth and seventh chords, the General MIDI (GM) soundset, and entertaining educational features included on some keyboards. I also offer lists of songs that showcase each type of keyboard. You can find them at www.dummies.com/extras/keyboard.
Finally, www.dummies.com/go/keyboard is home to the more than 100 audio tracks that accompany this book. Head there to listen to me demonstrate the sounds of instruments, play all the exercises provided, use various keyboard features, and much more. Sometimes I even talk!
Where to Go from Here
You don't have to read Keyboard For Dummies in any particular order; I've written it to be modular, so jumping around is perfectly fine. You can turn to the table of contents, find the section you're most interested in, and get started. That said, starting with Chapter 1 will give you a great overview of what this book covers.
If you don't have a keyboard and want to learn about what's out there, be sure to read Chapters 2 and 3. Want to know more about music and playing basics? Skip right over to Part II. If you have an arranger keyboard or anything with automatic accompaniment, be sure to check out Chapters 10 and 11. Interested in synthesis? Chapter 14 is for you. Eventually, you'll want to read them all; I wrote this book to be a resource that you can keep coming back to for (hopefully) years to come. Enjoy!
Part I
Getting Started with Keyboards
For Dummies can help you get started with lots of subjects. Visit www.dummies.com to learn more and do more with For Dummies.
In this part . . .
Meet the many kinds of keyboards that have been played throughout the years and the various types that are available today. They fall into logical families that help you to make sense of all the options.
Determine what your music-making needs are and decide what type of keyboard is the best choice for you.
Settle your keyboard into its optimal home. After it's there, a few common-sense safety precautions and bits of upkeep will help keep it in tiptop shape.
Chapter 1
Living in a Keyboard World
In This Chapter
Grasping the basic attributes of a keyboard
Understanding the benefits of reading music
Perusing beginner and advanced keyboard effects
Looking at practice options
You've probably seen images and scenes of people wielding the power and majesty of playing a keyboard:
Young genius Mozart driving his peer Salieri mad with his effortless brilliance (no, I wasn't there; I saw the movie Amadeus)
Early rockers like Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard banging away like men possessed
The ever-so-detached cool of the jazz pianist, playing with head close to the keys, cigarette dangling from his lips, lost in concentration
Prog-rocker Keith Emerson stabbing knives into his Hammond organ and riding it across stages, and then, for a break, strapping onto a spinning grand piano and playing, in the ultimate feat of showmanship
Countless music videos in the '80's featuring bands behind stacks of synthesizers or dancing around wearing strap-on keyboards (and sporting interesting haircuts to boot.)
Singer-songwriters like Billy Joel, Elton John, Alicia Keys, John Legend, and Carole King spinning their tales of life and love from behind massive grand pianos
All these images (and more) have caused many a young boy and girl to embark down the road of playing keyboard. And many baby boomers and successful businesspeople have returned to this love after carving out their careers and want to pick up where they left off.
Beyond the familiar black and white keys, though, keyboards can be wildly different instruments, and looking at the front panels may not give you much of a clue as to what's inside. This chapter gives you an overview of what keyboards are and just what you can do with them. Remember: I provide online audio tracks throughout the book to help demonstrate the topics at hand, including the discussions introduced in this chapter.
If what you're interested in is the acoustic piano, I recommend Piano For Dummies by Blake Neely (Wiley). It's a wonderful guide to all things piano.
Distinguishing Basic Keyboard Characteristics
The first thing to realize is that all keyboards aren't the same. They may make different types of sounds by different methods of sound production and are meant to do different things for the needs of different players. The following sections help you navigate this potentially confusing terrain.
Examining keyboard designs throughout the years
I divide keyboards up into the following types based on how they produce their sound to make the differences among keyboards easy to understand; you can read more in Chapter 2:
Acoustic instruments: These instruments require no power to make their sound, so I don't cover them here. But they include the acoustic piano, the harpsichord, and old pump pipe organs and such. Each produces its sound in different ways and sounds distinctly different from the others. And their sounds are certainly included in your electronic keyboard.
Electro-mechanical instruments: These options produce their sounds mechanically or acoustically and then have amplifiers and electronics to make the sound louder. The classic Rhodes and Wurlitzer electric pianos fall into this group, as well as the funky Clavinet (clav) and the mighty Hammond organ. These sounds are important to know because they're included in almost every keyboard you try out today.
Electronic instruments: Keyboards in this group produce their sounds by electronic means, either analog or digital, and are what this book covers most in-depth. Electronic keyboards use a variety of technologies to produce their sounds. Brochures and websites throw around terms like sampling, analog synthesis, DSP, and modeling, along with hundreds of seemingly meaningless acronyms. In Chapters 2 and 14, I describe and compare all these methods of sound production.
Touching on key weight
Those black and whites may look the same at first glance, but keys (or the key mechanism) can vary greatly from instrument to instrument. The first main distinction is whether the keys are weighted. Weighted keys give the feel of playing an acoustic piano. These keys may seem harder to play, but they offer you much more control over your dynamics, or ability to play more softly and loudly.
Non-weighted keys are often called synth-action; they're lighter to the touch and can be faster to play. The next step up is semi-weighted keys, which are firmer, more solid light-touch keys.
I discuss key weighting in greater detail in Chapter 2. The quality can vary from model to model and brand to brand, so it's an important aspect to consider when buying a keyboard; be sure to check out Chapter 3 as well.
Join the family: Grouping keyboards
Electronic keyboards fall into well-established families or categories of instruments. Each has a relatively standard set of features and is meant to be used for specific musical needs and playing situations. Within each family, you encounter entry-level models that are more basic and then step-up models that add to the quality and number of sounds, the number of features, the size and quality of the keyboard feel, and so on. The main keyboard food groups
are as follows:
Digital pianos: Acoustic piano wannabes or replacements.
Stage pianos: Digital pianos intended for the performing musician, with additional sounds and pro features.
Portable keyboards: Fun, lightweight, and full of features to help you sound better.
Arrangers: Keyboards with sophisticated backing features to produce the sound of a full band from your simple chord input.
Organs: Instruments dedicated to reproducing the sound, features, and feel of the legendary Hammond B3. They may include some additional sounds such as pipe organ, combo organs, and even other keyboard and synth sounds.
Synthesizers: Keyboards that allow you to make your own sounds and adjust the sounds provided. They can sound the most electronic and imaginative but now often include imitative and natural sounds as well.
Workstations: Basically, synthesizers with onboard recording systems to allow you to create complete works of original music. Very advanced and feature-rich.
Controllers: Keyboards that don't make sound themselves but are used to trigger sounds from your computer and other keyboards. These options use the MIDI standard to communicate with the sound-producing devices. (Head to Chapter 17 for details on MIDI.)
Chapters 2 and 3 are your keys (pun intended) to getting more info on all these families of instruments. Deciding which one is right for your needs can be confusing, but I help you organize and prioritize your needs, thinking through what you want to do, where you want to do it, and what you can afford, in Chapters 3 and 18.
Speaking the Musical Language
Perhaps you can pick up simple melodies by ear and hunt and peck with a few fingers to play the notes, but eventually you're going to want to develop your skills more. Learning to read musical notation opens up a way to communicate so much about playing any type of keyboard. It allows you to read the examples in this book and others; to buy sheet music and songbooks of your favorite piano pieces, artists, and songs; and to tackle instructional courses. Chapter 5 is your friendly and easy-to-follow introduction to the language of music. Developing your finger facility and strength takes you from fumble to finesse. Chapter 6 gets things rolling and will have you playing with good posture and fingering technique in no time.
Some forms of print music use what are called chord symbols to indicate notes that can be played beneath a melody. They're usually intended for guitar players to strum along, but the keyboardist can also use them to enhance his playing. A form of print music called a fake book provides only a melody and chord symbols, so you need to know your chords to follow along. And you need to understand chords to use certain backing features of some keyboards. Read up on chords in Chapter 7.
Making the Most of Your Keyboard's Basic Features
You can just turn on your keyboard and start playing, and you'll have a great time. But these are electronic keyboards, and they do so much more than that. Your keyboard is brimming with features and cool capabilities, like any self-respecting tech product these days is. I don't know of any that offer video games or let you video chat with your friends, but you never know what may come to pass!
Working with sounds
Some keyboards offer a small grouping of sounds; simple digital pianos may have 16 or so. But most offer at least 100 and sometimes thousands. Finding them, selecting them, and understanding whether they're simple single sounds or complex combinations of instruments stacked on top of each other or split between your hands takes some study. Chapter 8 breaks that all down and provides step-by-step instructions.
Exploring effects
What you hear coming out of a keyboard is actually more than just a sound; it almost always has some extra sonic treatment called effects added to it. Effects are audio treatments such as reverb, chorus, EQ, and delay, and they add to the spaciousness, color, and tonality of each sound. Even in simple keyboards, you have the choice whether to use them, and many keyboards allow you to vary the settings of their effects to produce different results, sometimes completely changing what effect a sound uses. Chapter 9 has the details.
Getting into automatic playing features
Many of today's keyboards have some functions that can do some playing on their own (with your guidance, of course). You can sit back and let the keyboard do some of the work. The most common features are
Drum rhythms: All portables and arrangers and many high-end digital pianos offer an on-demand drummer to add some groove to your performance. You can select the choices from the front panel, add fancy transitions called fills, and sometimes select progressively busier variations. Some stage pianos, synths, and workstations also offer these grooves, although they may be lurking within the arpeggiator feature (which I discuss in a moment). Visit Chapter 10 to find out more about getting your groove on.
Auto-accompaniment: How about having a full backing band ready to play whatever style of music, song, or chords you think of? Portables, arrangers, and some high-end digital pianos can do that and more. If you haven't been around keyboards and music for some time, you may not realize just how good the backing bands on today's keyboards have become. In a word: amazing! But like anything in life, you get back what you put into it, so read Chapter 11 to bone up on all the ways you can lead your band to even greater heights and realism.
Arpeggiation: With arpeggiation, you hold a few notes or a chord, and the keyboard repeats them over and over in a dizzying array of possible patterns — from simple up and down repetitions to pulsing grooves to complex rhythmic patterns. An arpeggiator is often what produces the fancy riffs you hear in pop and dance music. Many of the more advanced options can also produce realistic guitar strumming, harp flourishes, and even drum grooves. Chapter 12 has an introduction to this cool tool.
Delving into More-Advanced Digital Features
If you think of yourself as tech-savvy, you're probably looking for even more from this book, and I'm ready for you. Many of the keyboards have pretty advanced features — some that you would've thought you needed a computer to do. The following sections dive deeper into these digital waters.
Stepping into the virtual recording studio
Keyboards now commonly include some form of recording so that you can play and then listen back to yourself. Two forms of recording are available today:
Audio recording: This method is the recording of the actual sound you produced. It's what you listen to from a CD, an MP3 player, or your favorite online music streaming service.
MIDI recording: MIDI is the Musical Instrument Digital Interface standard, a fancy name for a digital way that musical products can talk to each other. It's not the sound you hear but rather a way of communicating the gestures, moves, and settings of your electronic device as you played it.
Each format has its own terms, capabilities, and benefits, and musicians at every level use each of them. Chapter 13 breaks them both down and helps you see what you and your keyboard can do in terms of creating and sharing your music with others. If you want to know even more about MIDI, check out Chapter 17 as well.
Shaping the sounds you play
So many of today's keyboards offer control over the sounds that are included, whether that's adjusting them a little bit or completely changing them, warping them, or building them from the ground up. For many musicians, creating the sound is as important as the music they play with it. The art of making sounds is usually called programming a keyboard, or sound design. If you've heard the terms waveform, oscillator, filter, envelope generator, or LFO, you know that they're the building blocks of this creative art. And Chapter 14 is your entry into this highly rewarding aspect of using an electronic keyboard.
Checking out the computer connection
Thanks to the development of MIDI, keyboards can connect to computers and tablets for a broad array of activities and enjoyment. In Chapter 17, I introduce you to all these categories of software, from recording and sound editing to playing additional sounds that are running on your computer to working with virtual teachers. This exciting world is the cutting edge of music making and study.
Practicing with and without Help
Whether you prefer to study keyboard playing with an electronic teacher or just want to hack out songs you love on your own, I have you covered.
Lurking inside many portable keyboards and digital pianos are patient music teachers, waiting to help you learn a few tunes and build your musical skills. They never yell, won't slap your wrists with a ruler, and are willing to go over things as slowly and as many times as you need. In Chapter 15, I explain and demonstrate both the Casio and Yamaha ways of giving you virtual keyboard lessons and provide practical advice on how to get the most out of them.
But sometimes you hear a song and you just want to sit down and play it right away at your keyboard. Why wait until you can buy the music or go to your next piano lesson? Learning to play by ear and to figure out songs from recordings is a great skill to develop. Some can do it naturally, but for most people, it takes some work. I have worked very hard at developing that skill, and I'm happy to share my best tips with you in Chapter 16.
Chapter 2
So Many Keyboards, So Little Time
In This Chapter
Defining the differences among acoustic, electro-mechanical, and electronic keyboards
Describing key feel and polyphony
Meeting the many types of electronic keyboards available
Debating the pros and cons of acoustic and electronic keyboards
At first glance, keyboards seem like they must all be the same. After all, each offers the familiar groupings of black and white keys, right? In truth, other than the fact that you place your fingers on the same keys to produce the same notes, the world of keyboards is vast, and each instrument is played somewhat differently from the others. They feel different, they're different sizes and weights, and they can vary significantly in cost. Some keyboards produce one sound, others offer a few sounds, and others may produce thousands of different sounds.
If you've watched your favorite artist or band perform, you've often seen a keyboard player behind a couple of keyboards or perhaps surrounded by a large circle of them (cape and wizard hat optional). Or you've seen a band with two, three, or even more keyboardists, each with a couple of keyboards piled up. Perhaps you've wondered why they had so many: Is it a macho reaction to the guitar player with that wall of amps? A nerd fantasy run amuck? Or do they actually require multiple keyboards to produce what you're hearing and enjoying? I think all of the above are true to some extent, but the final option is the actual serious answer.
In this chapter, I pull back the curtain on the wide variety of keyboards that exists. I help you understand the basic technology of how they make their sound(s), what makes each one special, and what each is best for. I explain how digital pianos reproduce the acoustic for far lower cost, smaller size, and less required upkeep. You discover what touch sensitivity is and how that dynamic control over volume behaves differently on the various types of keyboards. Finally, I help you recognize when only the real acoustic instrument will do.
Identifying Different Types of Keyboards
The first step in helping you understand the vast array of keyboard instruments is to break them down into some logical groupings based on how they're designed and how they operate. The following sections outline these groupings: acoustic, electro-mechanical, and electronic. The keyboards you'll be looking at today are likely electronic, but knowing and understanding all these offerings is a good idea.
Acoustic keyboards
An acoustic instrument produces its sound mechanically, without the need for electricity, speakers, or any form of electronics. It's made from natural materials such as wood, metal, fabric, or even animal skin. So when you think of acoustic instruments, you think of acoustic (steel or nylon string) guitar, the upright bass, a conga drum, and so on. In the world of keyboards, the main acoustic instruments are the acoustic piano, the harpsichord, the clavichord (not the Clavinet!), the celeste, and the earliest pipe organs. (Think about it: Bach certainly didn't have access to electricity!) Figures 2-1 through 2-3 show the big three from this group: the acoustic piano, the harpsichord, and the pipe organ, respectively.
Photograph courtesy of Yamaha Corporation of America
Figure 2-1: Acoustic grand piano.
© Maxim Anisimov/iStockphoto.com
Figure 2-2: The harpsichord.
© leadinglights/iStockphoto.com
Figure 2-3: The pipe organ.
The piano (and to an extent, the clavichord) strikes a string with a type of hammer to produce a musical pitch. The harpsichord plucks a string to do the same. The celeste uses a hammer to strike a metal bar to produce a bell-like tone. And the pipe organ runs pressurized air (called wind) through a pipe to produce a sustaining musical tone. Each instrument has different-sized objects attached to each individual key to produce all the pitches needed to play a piece of music. So even though you see the same layout of black and white keys on the keyboard, what happens when you press a key down is very different inside the instrument.
Listen to Tracks 1 through 5 to hear examples of each of these acoustic keyboards.
In the world of acoustic instruments, the size of the instrument itself determines the volume or amount of sound the keyboard can produce. Larger/longer strings, bigger pipes, and a bigger body help the keyboard produce more sound. In the case of a piano, a wooden soundboard inside the case resonates to help amplify or increase the volume of the vibrating string(s). So a smaller spinet piano can't produce as loud a sound as a nine-foot concert grand piano, in large part because of the size of this wooden soundboard.
Electro-mechanical keyboards
An electro-mechanical instrument is one that combines an acoustic/mechanical sound generator with some additional electronics, usually to help amplify or increase the volume of the sound produced. So the initial sound, both the tone and pitch, is determined by an acoustic mechanism (usually a string or metal object being plucked or struck in some fashion). All these instruments include a pickup per string/tone (a device that translates sound vibrations into an electrical signal) and an amplification system for you to hear their sound, which means they require electricity to operate. And without the sounds' being fed into an onboard or external speaker, you wouldn't be able to hear them.
These instruments are so popular that they remain the core group of sounds (along with the acoustic piano) reproduced in all electronic keyboards to this day. So getting more familiar with their features and sound is an important part of your keyboard education.
The most common of these instruments include the Rhodes electric piano (sometimes called the Fender Rhodes and often alluded to as a tine piano), the Wurlitzer electric piano (often referred to as a reed piano), and the Hohner Clavinet (commonly called clav for short), pictured in Figures 2-4 through 2-6, respectively. Slightly less common but still popular were the Hohner Pianet and the Yamaha CP-70/80 electric grand pianos.
Photograph courtesy of Ken Rich/Ken Rich Sound Services
Figure 2-4: Rhodes MK1 suitcase electric piano.
Photograph courtesy of Ken Rich/Ken Rich Sound Services
Figure 2-5: Wurlitzer electric piano, model 200A.
Photograph courtesy of Ken Rich/Ken Rich Sound Services
Figure 2-6: Hohner D6 Clavinet.
Tracks 6 through 12 provide examples of each of these electric pianos and electro-mechanical instruments.
The Hammond organ (the most common models are the B-3, C-3, A-100
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