I wanna learn piano. I already play guitar. Whats a good cheap piano to learn on

I wanna learn piano. I already play guitar. Whats a good cheap piano to learn on.

Attached: yamaha-dgx-660b-88-key-weighted-digital-piano-10776505863_1024x1024@2x.jpg (2000x1629, 160K)

Other urls found in this thread:

pmtonline.co.uk/blog/2018/07/04/digital-piano-showdown-roland-fp-30-vs-yamaha-p-125/
myredditvideos.com/
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

boesendorfer imperial

OP-1

Its hard question if you cant afford a good one and dont have the passion to spend your time everydya to improve do i would recommend pic related

Korg are the best btw

Attached: 5E6F449F-7250-4E25-9250-50F9B1BE15DE.jpg (700x700, 46K)

This is the best electric piano on the market right now

Attached: piano.jpg (800x542, 70K)

I have no previous music education experience and just bought a beginner Yamaha keyboard.
Had it for 10 days and I read up on a lot of theory and been trying random exercises. I can see some improvements already. Well, however much you can see in 10 days. Now I just need to stay consistent.

>cheap
>good

I couldn't afford to drop money on every instrument I want to learn. I literally learned drums with a pair of sticks, pillows, and foot tapping

Then buy a cheap casio piano but they sound like crap and likeSaid that doesnt exist

How does one go about learning piano? I mean, I don't just wanna go around learning songs, I'd like to be able to play what tunes I have in my head and such.

get a teacher

YouTube. You need to learn music theory as well.

I'd like to get some basics down before spending my cash like that, any prerequisites you suggest?

First step is to learn correct position and finger movement

Second would be to learn major and minor chords (very simple) and understand how they re made

Third is to invest time in the basic scales like major minor and pentatonic

Then and just after you underdstand a bit of those get a teacher

Yamaha makes really good cheap keyboards. Get full sized keys and just practice.

Listen up plebs

If you want a good affordable electric piano, you really have only two choices

It's between the Roland FP30 and the Yamaha P125

pmtonline.co.uk/blog/2018/07/04/digital-piano-showdown-roland-fp-30-vs-yamaha-p-125/

Honestly, both are great and will do nicely

I'm a grade 7 classically trained pianist and I although I have an upright, I wanted something I could take to university and on holidays so I did a ton of research and bought the Roland and I couldn't ask for better

I would personally advice u to pick the Roland because of its SuperNATURAL sound engine which sounds way more authentic than the Yamaha, also the Yamaha's keys feel kind've plasticky (I've played both at stores so I know)

Basically, if you want a great affordable piano, get the Roland FP-30 — you cannot go wrong


Oh and if u really want to learn then u will need lessons :) x

Attached: roland fp30.jpg (3024x3024, 1.23M)

shill

Can confirm based and redpilled, I also have the Roland and it's one of the best pianos I've played in years, keys feel totally weighted, incredible sound and action

Im a black belt pianist that learnt from youtube and what i said is completely true

I mean I'm sure those are great but they also cost 3-4 times a beginner Yamaha keyboard. Most people will give up in a few weeks/months, to me it makes sense to start from a cheaper thing and then upgrade once you are sure you are sticking with it and learned some basics already.

Yeah you're right, link some alternatives for OP, after all he did ask

Well I am the other beginner guy that was quoted there, I did a ton of research and I bought a Yamaha E363, for the below 200 euro price point it looked like it had by far the best consensus.

If I stick with this I will end up upgrading to a better instrument but for now this seems fine to me to learn some basics of theory, scales, chords, fingering etc. and play around.

i suggest the yamaha p45, very minimal and great for beginners.