Everyone else rated this a good keyboard so what gives? Piano snob or does it suck because I just bought this and am awaiting it's arrival. I am a total newbie though, and it sounds good to me for what that's worth.
@@f.a3202 Yeah I do recommend it. The only thing I don't like about it is the volume on piano setting. It doesn't seem loud enough to me but and it's louder on all the others like organ etc...I do like it though and would buy it again, the sound is great not at all electronic sounding.
I tried this (NP12) and the NP32 out yesterday, the sound was subpar, the volume out put from the speakers was also low, the build was cheap on both models and the volume dial was very small and cheap. In passing the same day walked by the British Heart Foundation charity shop, they had a 20 year old Roland synthesiser for £40, it sounds amazing much fuller and richer. I bought it instead and I'm very happy. The new Yamaha's that can complete in sound quality to the old Roland are about £350 plus. I'm sticking with the Roland and saving up for something in a higher tier.
@@nikolasvalsamidis1870 Then what is the Graded Soft Touch all about? Because this model should have it AND it should somehow give a slight feeling of weighted keys.
I have a question for the NP 32! So, you can tune the notes to up to/down to 414,8 - 466,8 Hz. But the problem is that my keyboard can’t go any lower then the low B FLAT. It claims it can go to low G and that is lower then a normal piano.
😂 🤣 👌 👍 Thanks for the review.. I was planning to get YAMAHA Piaggero NP-32B 😂 I rather purchase Yamaha PSR E463.. Because then I've more possibilities than bulk in inferior tone..
Actually, the keys are full sized. There might be slight differences among acoustic pianos too. I have a fairly expensive acoustic piano which has 163mm for one octave. I have an np 12 too, which has 161mm. 100 year old piano’s keyboards are even smaller, and some grand has 166 mm. So yes, i wouldn’t say that the keys are not full sized, there are always differences
The keys are making an annoying sound when pressed? Can it be avoided or all pianos/organs make the same sound when the keys are pressed? Is the Casio CTK-3500 Better for beginners? I can tell this NP-12 has a better sound but i dont like the sounds the keys make when pressed... Can anyone tell me?
I owned this keyboard for 3 months and here's my opinion: The piano sound is nice, but volume levels ( speaker sound) isnt the greatest, especially the lower keys ( I'm not sure if you can connect this keyboard to speakers or a keyboard amp). The keys aren't regular piano size keys. They keys are not semi weighted, but they have a decent touch. It's a very light piano . I honestly think think this would be for kids just starting out, but not for an adult beginner. I've even tried semi weighted keyboards ( Alesis) and did not like that either. ( I sold both keyboards). If budget is tight, look used, and for a fully weighted keyboard, either Yamaha, Roland, Kawai, and the Casio Privia line. If you still want to buy this keyboard, dont buy it new, look for it used, you will save a lot of money.
I have a question for the NP 32! So, you can tune the notes to up to/down to 414,8 - 466,8 Hz. But the problem is that my keyboard can’t go any lower then the low B FLAT. It claims it can go to low G and that is lower then a normal piano.
Good thing you mentioned about when you change tone that it has that clicking sound. I was planning to buy this piano keyboard.
is not when you change the tone but when you switch octaves
SheetMusic Transcriptions thanks for clarifying that. Im new to this digital piano
Everyone else rated this a good keyboard so what gives? Piano snob or does it suck because I just bought this and am awaiting it's arrival. I am a total newbie though, and it sounds good to me for what that's worth.
did you get it? if yes, do you recommend it?
@@f.a3202 Yeah I do recommend it. The only thing I don't like about it is the volume on piano setting. It doesn't seem loud enough to me but and it's louder on all the others like organ etc...I do like it though and would buy it again, the sound is great not at all electronic sounding.
I tried this (NP12) and the NP32 out yesterday, the sound was subpar, the volume out put from the speakers was also low, the build was cheap on both models and the volume dial was very small and cheap.
In passing the same day walked by the British Heart Foundation charity shop, they had a 20 year old Roland synthesiser for £40, it sounds amazing much fuller and richer. I bought it instead and I'm very happy.
The new Yamaha's that can complete in sound quality to the old Roland are about £350 plus.
I'm sticking with the Roland and saving up for something in a higher tier.
only the volume is not so loud you need a keyboard amp. good for practicing and self play only ..
Are the keys weighted ...not just pressure sensitive but like heavy or are they just like normal light keys
no wheighted
@@nikolasvalsamidis1870 Then what is the Graded Soft Touch all about? Because this model should have it AND it should somehow give a slight feeling of weighted keys.
@@Jerokun They are semi-weighted keys
What is the Graded Soft Touch all about? Because this model should have it AND it should somehow give a slight feeling of weighted keys.
I have a question for the NP 32! So, you can tune the notes to up to/down to 414,8 - 466,8 Hz. But the problem is that my keyboard can’t go any lower then the low B FLAT. It claims it can go to low G and that is lower then a normal piano.
😂 🤣 👌 👍 Thanks for the review.. I was planning to get YAMAHA Piaggero NP-32B 😂 I rather purchase Yamaha PSR E463.. Because then I've more possibilities than bulk in inferior tone..
I’m having issue to connect my Yamaha np-12 to Simply Piano app on iPhone/iPad, using cable. Any idea what could the issue
How do you change the beat of the metronome?
hold the metronome key while pressing Piano or E.Piano for slow and fast tempo
nice video
Hello, how big is the difference between piaggero and full keys,? On many pages you can read that np 12 has full-size keys...
the difference is that a real piano or full size keys are normal size and Piaggero keys are slightly smaller.
Normally an octave has 166mm , the np 12 and 32 have just 160,5mm. So the difference at a single Key is less than 1 millimeter
SchrumpelDumpel
Thank you
Actually, the keys are full sized. There might be slight differences among acoustic pianos too. I have a fairly expensive acoustic piano which has 163mm for one octave. I have an np 12 too, which has 161mm. 100 year old piano’s keyboards are even smaller, and some grand has 166 mm. So yes, i wouldn’t say that the keys are not full sized, there are always differences
Should I but this keyboard or Yamaha psr ew300?
PSR is completely different instrument, it depends for what you need it. Piaggero only has 5 voices, no rhythm tracks.
The keys are making an annoying sound when pressed? Can it be avoided or all pianos/organs make the same sound when the keys are pressed? Is the Casio CTK-3500 Better for beginners? I can tell this NP-12 has a better sound but i dont like the sounds the keys make when pressed... Can anyone tell me?
Thank you so much
what about p45 i the keys are same size like in a accoustric piano or smaller?
The Keys of the keyboard on the video are NOT full size. I explain that in the video
Yes p45 are full size weighted
I owned this keyboard for 3 months and here's my opinion:
The piano sound is nice, but volume levels ( speaker sound) isnt the greatest, especially the lower keys ( I'm not sure if you can connect this keyboard to speakers or a keyboard amp).
The keys aren't regular piano size keys.
They keys are not semi weighted, but they have a decent touch.
It's a very light piano .
I honestly think think this would be for kids just starting out, but not for an adult beginner.
I've even tried semi weighted keyboards ( Alesis) and did not like that either. ( I sold both keyboards).
If budget is tight, look used, and for a fully weighted keyboard, either Yamaha, Roland, Kawai, and the Casio Privia line.
If you still want to buy this keyboard, dont buy it new, look for it used, you will save a lot of money.
This piano function as a controller?
Yes
Ummm uhhh ummm uhhh, it’s pretty decent, uhhhh
If a kid spills soda on it , it's not that expensive really😃😃😃
I have a question for the NP 32! So, you can tune the notes to up to/down to 414,8 - 466,8 Hz. But the problem is that my keyboard can’t go any lower then the low B FLAT. It claims it can go to low G and that is lower then a normal piano.
Where is the question?
In the Yamaha piaggero np-32 np-12 book. Page 21. But i already figured it out!