Casio Keyboard History
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This keyboard frankly sounds as good as those costing 2 - 3 times more. It appears to have a better sound chip than Casio’s CTK flavour keyboards and I am glad I chose this line. The piano tone actually sounds like a real piano, the harmonium like a harmonium and the flute has breathing realism mixed into its mellow tones. Casio introduced electronic keyboards into the U.S. Sales began to take off in the mid-1980s. In 1983, the total number of electronic keyboards sold in the United States numbered less than 300,000. By 1987, American consumers bought close to five million.
*Casio Keyboard Models
*Casio Keyboard History -
*Target Casio Keyboard
A casino event of seattle convention center. Great deals on Casio Vintage Electronic Keyboards. It’s a great time to upgrade your home music studio gear with the largest selection at eBay.com. Fast & Free shipping on many items! In 1980, Casio and Yamaha released their first “portable electronic instruments”. Both were 8-voice polyphonic, but while Yamaha’s keyboards — the “PortaSounds” PS-1, PS-2 and PS-3 — were quite small and featured rhythm and auto-accompaniment, Casio’s rather bulky Casiotone 201, which lacked both, had the advantage of having a much better sound and much more presets — a.January 1980: Release of the Casiotone 201 electronic keyboard
In 1979, Casio announced that it would enter the electronic musical instruments business, further expanding beyond calculators and timepieces. In January 1980, the company released the Casiotone electronic keyboard, which was designed to be so easy and fun to play that anyone could learn it without any special training or rigorous practice. The objective of the Casiotone was not to create a keyboard with the typical electronic sound, but rather with tones that reproduced the sounds of the piano, organ, and guitar. The economic growth at that time in Japan had created a cultural mood characterized by a shift away from material toward spiritual pursuits, and the Casiotone was instantly accepted by the market as a fun new way to enjoy music. Casiotone CT-380 Keyboard
Casiotone refers to a series of home electronic keyboards released by Casio Computer Co., Ltd. in the early 1980s. In 2019 the series was revived with the launch of three new keyboards.[1] Casio claims that the Casiotone 201 (CT-201) was ’the first electronic keyboard with full-size keys that anyone could afford’.[2]
The first Casiotone keyboards used a sound synthesis technique known as vowel-consonant synthesis to approximate the sounds of other instruments (albeit not very accurately). Most Casiotone keyboards were small, with miniature keys designed for children’s fingers, and were not intended for use by professional musicians; they usually contained a rhythm generator, with several user-selectable rhythm patterns, and often the means to automatically play accompaniments. While the name ’Casiotone’ disappeared from Casio’s new keyboard catalog when more accurate synthesis technologies became prevalent, their low cost and abundance made them fairly common fixtures in garage rock bands. Musicians and bands known to use Casiotone keyboards include: Alexis Taylor of Hot Chip, TG Miller of Black Camaro, Dan Deacon, Lettie, Maurizio Arcieri of Krisma, Kevin Parker of Tame Impala, Turnstyle, Trio, Ozma, Cobol Pongide and Hedluv, Chiara Lee of Father Murphy, Elena Lozovskaya.VL-Tone VL-1 (1979, pre-Casiotone)Casiotone 201 (1980, 1st Casiotone)Casiotone 401 (1981, 1st Casiotone with polyphonic auto accompaniment)Casiotone 1000P (1982, semi-programmable synthesizer with arpeggiator)Casiotone 501 (1983, successor to CT-401)Casiotone MT-60 (identical case design with later MT-45)Casio CZ-101 (1984, phase distortion synthesis)Sampletone SK-1 (1985, sampler)Families[edit]
Old Casiotone keyboards came in three distinct families, separated by the method of synthesis.[citation needed]
*The famous VL-Tone VL-1 (1979) uses a method of sound synthesis based on the Walsh function.
*Keyboards such as the CT-202 (c. 1981) use vowel-Consonant synthesis. The later model of this family, the MT-65, is one of the more well known and sought after models, as it also contains auto-accompaniment drum beats and bass lines.
*Some other keyboards (such as the MT-35 and MT-45) use a combination of two different binary weighted numbers (1 and 64). The larger weight bit provides the fundamental, and the smaller weight bit provides the harmonic complexity.
The later, more professional range of keyboards, the CZ series (1984–1986), used phase distortion synthesis, which is mathematically almost identical to Yamaha’s frequency modulation synthesis, although implemented slightly differently in order to avoid patent infringement.
After the release of famous Casio SK-1 in 1985, gradually PCM sample based tone generator became dominant in Casio keyboards line. After the 1990s, most Casio keyboards utilize PCM tone generator or its variants.
Some early 1980s models in the PT series of keyboards, such as the PT-30, PT-50, PT-80 and PT-82, were not marketed under the Casiotone name. The name was revived again later for models such as the PT-87 (which is basically the same as the PT-82) which was again sold as Casiotone.ROM Packs[edit]ROM Pack
Some models sold from 1983 onwards included a cartridge bay to accept Casio ROM Packs which contained sheet music in a digital format. The keyboards could play the notes automatically, or (with the exception of the PT-50[3]) illuminate LEDs above each key to teach the user how to play the song. Most keyboards came with one ROM Pack as standard, but a large number of additional packs, covering a wide range of musical genres, were available to purchase separately.[4] The last ROM Pack model was the CT-840, which came out in 1990.
*ROM Pack models (excerpt)
*
Raet online inloggen. Casio PT-80
*
Casiotone MT-820
*
Casio DH-800 Digital HornCasio Keyboard ModelsCasio Keyboard History -See also[edit]Target Casio KeyboardReferences[edit]
*^Casio Unveils Revamped Casiotone Series At Summer NAMM 2019[1]
*^’Casiotone Series | Casio Music Gear’. www.casiomusicgear.com. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
*^Casio PT-50 Unlike the later ROM Pack keyboards, there are no LEDs above the keys.
*^List of Casio ROM PacksExternal links[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Casiotone.Retrieved from ’https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Casiotone&oldid=991208375’
Register here: http://gg.gg/v65a8
https://diarynote.indered.space
This keyboard frankly sounds as good as those costing 2 - 3 times more. It appears to have a better sound chip than Casio’s CTK flavour keyboards and I am glad I chose this line. The piano tone actually sounds like a real piano, the harmonium like a harmonium and the flute has breathing realism mixed into its mellow tones. Casio introduced electronic keyboards into the U.S. Sales began to take off in the mid-1980s. In 1983, the total number of electronic keyboards sold in the United States numbered less than 300,000. By 1987, American consumers bought close to five million.
*Casio Keyboard Models
*Casio Keyboard History -
*Target Casio Keyboard
A casino event of seattle convention center. Great deals on Casio Vintage Electronic Keyboards. It’s a great time to upgrade your home music studio gear with the largest selection at eBay.com. Fast & Free shipping on many items! In 1980, Casio and Yamaha released their first “portable electronic instruments”. Both were 8-voice polyphonic, but while Yamaha’s keyboards — the “PortaSounds” PS-1, PS-2 and PS-3 — were quite small and featured rhythm and auto-accompaniment, Casio’s rather bulky Casiotone 201, which lacked both, had the advantage of having a much better sound and much more presets — a.January 1980: Release of the Casiotone 201 electronic keyboard
In 1979, Casio announced that it would enter the electronic musical instruments business, further expanding beyond calculators and timepieces. In January 1980, the company released the Casiotone electronic keyboard, which was designed to be so easy and fun to play that anyone could learn it without any special training or rigorous practice. The objective of the Casiotone was not to create a keyboard with the typical electronic sound, but rather with tones that reproduced the sounds of the piano, organ, and guitar. The economic growth at that time in Japan had created a cultural mood characterized by a shift away from material toward spiritual pursuits, and the Casiotone was instantly accepted by the market as a fun new way to enjoy music. Casiotone CT-380 Keyboard
Casiotone refers to a series of home electronic keyboards released by Casio Computer Co., Ltd. in the early 1980s. In 2019 the series was revived with the launch of three new keyboards.[1] Casio claims that the Casiotone 201 (CT-201) was ’the first electronic keyboard with full-size keys that anyone could afford’.[2]
The first Casiotone keyboards used a sound synthesis technique known as vowel-consonant synthesis to approximate the sounds of other instruments (albeit not very accurately). Most Casiotone keyboards were small, with miniature keys designed for children’s fingers, and were not intended for use by professional musicians; they usually contained a rhythm generator, with several user-selectable rhythm patterns, and often the means to automatically play accompaniments. While the name ’Casiotone’ disappeared from Casio’s new keyboard catalog when more accurate synthesis technologies became prevalent, their low cost and abundance made them fairly common fixtures in garage rock bands. Musicians and bands known to use Casiotone keyboards include: Alexis Taylor of Hot Chip, TG Miller of Black Camaro, Dan Deacon, Lettie, Maurizio Arcieri of Krisma, Kevin Parker of Tame Impala, Turnstyle, Trio, Ozma, Cobol Pongide and Hedluv, Chiara Lee of Father Murphy, Elena Lozovskaya.VL-Tone VL-1 (1979, pre-Casiotone)Casiotone 201 (1980, 1st Casiotone)Casiotone 401 (1981, 1st Casiotone with polyphonic auto accompaniment)Casiotone 1000P (1982, semi-programmable synthesizer with arpeggiator)Casiotone 501 (1983, successor to CT-401)Casiotone MT-60 (identical case design with later MT-45)Casio CZ-101 (1984, phase distortion synthesis)Sampletone SK-1 (1985, sampler)Families[edit]
Old Casiotone keyboards came in three distinct families, separated by the method of synthesis.[citation needed]
*The famous VL-Tone VL-1 (1979) uses a method of sound synthesis based on the Walsh function.
*Keyboards such as the CT-202 (c. 1981) use vowel-Consonant synthesis. The later model of this family, the MT-65, is one of the more well known and sought after models, as it also contains auto-accompaniment drum beats and bass lines.
*Some other keyboards (such as the MT-35 and MT-45) use a combination of two different binary weighted numbers (1 and 64). The larger weight bit provides the fundamental, and the smaller weight bit provides the harmonic complexity.
The later, more professional range of keyboards, the CZ series (1984–1986), used phase distortion synthesis, which is mathematically almost identical to Yamaha’s frequency modulation synthesis, although implemented slightly differently in order to avoid patent infringement.
After the release of famous Casio SK-1 in 1985, gradually PCM sample based tone generator became dominant in Casio keyboards line. After the 1990s, most Casio keyboards utilize PCM tone generator or its variants.
Some early 1980s models in the PT series of keyboards, such as the PT-30, PT-50, PT-80 and PT-82, were not marketed under the Casiotone name. The name was revived again later for models such as the PT-87 (which is basically the same as the PT-82) which was again sold as Casiotone.ROM Packs[edit]ROM Pack
Some models sold from 1983 onwards included a cartridge bay to accept Casio ROM Packs which contained sheet music in a digital format. The keyboards could play the notes automatically, or (with the exception of the PT-50[3]) illuminate LEDs above each key to teach the user how to play the song. Most keyboards came with one ROM Pack as standard, but a large number of additional packs, covering a wide range of musical genres, were available to purchase separately.[4] The last ROM Pack model was the CT-840, which came out in 1990.
*ROM Pack models (excerpt)
*
Raet online inloggen. Casio PT-80
*
Casiotone MT-820
*
Casio DH-800 Digital HornCasio Keyboard ModelsCasio Keyboard History -See also[edit]Target Casio KeyboardReferences[edit]
*^Casio Unveils Revamped Casiotone Series At Summer NAMM 2019[1]
*^’Casiotone Series | Casio Music Gear’. www.casiomusicgear.com. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
*^Casio PT-50 Unlike the later ROM Pack keyboards, there are no LEDs above the keys.
*^List of Casio ROM PacksExternal links[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Casiotone.Retrieved from ’https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Casiotone&oldid=991208375’
Register here: http://gg.gg/v65a8
https://diarynote.indered.space
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