Yes. I understand the product. All brands have a Digital Piano. Casio rules for some years in the segment. Other brands have a DP for the commercial reasons. Not a great purpose, but the same and simple purpose: Make a realistic piano realistic feel. Korg is trying with a DP with less immersion with de light keys, but with portability purpose. We don't seem it's since Roland RD-64 and SP4-7... This is a DP focused in portability. It's the idea that the brands forgotten in the Digital Piano Wars. I think it can be a bestseller with the beginner audience and they want a good piano tone but don't want to carry an anvil.
to play music casually, or to have a lightweight MIDI controller, and to fit in a space such as in New York, Tokyo, where space in the house might be limited, it seems like a good choice, especially at $399 and for 88 keys
I bought this to return to playing piano after 15 years. I mosty use the piano1, and when I'm tired of the piano, harpsichord (it sounds amazing, and releasing the keys also have their own sound). I have no idea why piano2 exists, which sounds like piano through a wall. I also think "strings" should have been a single violin or some other instrument. The perfect instrument for me to suck, and try to suck less when trying to play my favourite scores. I basicaly bough back a part of my childhood which I missed all the time.
Wow! It doesn't have 500 buttons or an LCD screen with 8 million settings. I'm sold! I just want a digital piano that works like...a piano. This is what my tax refund will be going to! 👍👍
@@DanielCabrera-t9y It's AWESOME. It's a piano, not a wanna-be "everything". I live on the top floor of an old building and wanted a piano that is JUST a piano. This is PERFECT.
Yes, the D1 still has great features, though it lacks a few modcons. I just hope that if the much-wished-for D2 ever arrives (and it has USB) it still has the MIDI legacy input & output. Curiously, the D1's exterior and spec look kind of similar to the old Yamaha P80 I used to use. Speaking of the P80: it had a more agile action than the GHS which Yamaha now favours.
The D1 for me is the best good looking one for that range very minimalistic it doesn’t need to have many sounds just the basic ones improved Pianos / EP / Organ /String/ vocals/ brass and Drums at least 2 or 3 of each Layer/Split USB and onboard speakers it would beat the competition it would look even better than the Roland RD88 Basically would be the economic version of the Grand-stage So Korg make it and I’ll buy it right away 👍🙌🏼
Do you plan to make a Liano 61-key version? That would be my dream pliano. (I'm sure there are other who might be interested in other key amount versions too like a 49-key version or 73-key version for example) Thank you!
Weight is not so much an issue for portability. It's the format, I would buy this in a heartbeat if it could be folded into half like other cheap manufacturers are already offering, and voila carry one format. Check with your airline, it's light, yeah, but about 140cm long. Sucks, right? Need a flightless, pay 100 per trip extra, well, nope. I guess I buy one, take a Dremel, and DIY
Can you provide some info on the samples size and how many samples are used for each tome? The manual cagiely mentioned the piano tone uses three samples hence the polyphony is only 120/3=40. I don’t understand why you need three samples instead of two stereo Left and Right samples. I am also curious to know how many different velocity sample uses for the tone.
For a controller, you should look at the Novation Impulse 61 or Akai MPK88 (this one is discontinued). Arturia, Studiologic, and M-Audio offer alternatives, I know nothing about them other than they exist. Juno-DS88 makes for a great controller and can supplement your sonic arsenal, provided that your workstation isn't a Roland, otherwise it will overlap too much. edit: Liano has no MIDI DIN output, you cannot use it as a controller, I am seeing
@@Jason75913 Not without a computer, anyway. As long as you also have a USB MIDI interface for whatever computer you use, it's cool, but that's gonna be limiting. Also, I'd pass on it because it doesn't have pitch bend or mod wheels. Unless you like drawing those events in your DAW or you don't use pitch bend or modulation in your music, this isn't the best controller out there. Korg probably made this to compete against the lower end Casio Privias and Yamaha's low-to-midrange pianos.
The Kawai ES110 is in a totally different league with it's graded hammer action. This Korg is more like a Yamaha Piaggero NP32 which has light synth-like key action.
Another 88-key slab. Why not 76 keys, with the board weighing only around 5.0 kg? If you want light, then do really light and keep the dimensions in length low. Just imagine if Casio would start making 76-key slabs again ...! The amount of functions in their new CT-S lineup is crazy and the tones sound great.
I love this idea. And please make the lowest note a C like on some of Korgs other 73 or 76 note keyboards, which is so much more useful than an E or F!
To be fair, i would not buy a digital piano with less than 88 keys. There are numerous pieces, especially in the classical world, that require the full range of 88 keys.
@@argi0774 I was not aware the keys were completely unweighted, since there are even more affordable DP's than this one with at least half-decent weighted keys. I guess the main selling point is the low weight then.
I would say the Korg SP280. It's more expensive but hammer action is always more expensive. If you don't need speakers, the D1 is an amazing value. Best keybed in class, and honestly my favorite digital piano keybed in general.
@@Elazarko It was lighter than I expected at first, but I’ve grown very used to it. It’s actually extremely similar in feel to my old Korg KARMA, which has a great synth action.
@@madness8556 I would just save up a bit more and get the Nautilus 61 or SV-2 73 if I wanted a Korg stage piano that much. They also boast better sounds. RD-88 would probably make me happier with its smaller size and the ability to import custom Zen-Core patches from my MC-707. 61 keys is enough for me, RD-88 is overkill there, plus in quality it is also even more overkill than what I already have. 🤣🤣
And I wish that Korg would make a shorter portable keyboard (fewer keys) but with a weighted action - kind of the opposite to what it's done on the Liano. To be fair, there is the professional Korg SV... with 73 keys, but I was thinking of something like a shorter version of the B2 or the D1, but not the B2N, which lacks a weighted action.
Agreed. I owned an RD-88 since released and it's awesome. It would be great if Korg offered a portable stage piano with capability to tweak/multi-layer/modified sounds and built-in speakers. Korg Kross 2 (88 ver.) is quite close in comparison but lacks internal speakers. They should have a better version of the D1 stage piano with more capability to edit sounds & effects, and knobs/sliders to gain an easier access to functions/parameter changes for a live gig.
Don't be mean. Do you enjoy making fun of others? You should be ashamed of yourself. Luciano Minetti is the product mamager for Korg. And he did a nice presentation.
In case I didn't say so before, thanks for the video. Perhaps this instrument has a proper market, but I wonder. I hate to think of unsuspecting parents buying this for kids to take lessons on. It might serve for one year with absolute beginners, but then you only need 61 keys. Many of us don"t need or want 88 keys, but most of us do want weighted actions, so I can't understand why manufacturers keep bombarding us with 88-key non-pianistic actions. How can you use the extreme keys anyway, when the action is so unpianistic? Yamaha did it with the NP range too. Even when Yamaha added the 70-something-key model, the saved space was wasted by placing speakers at the ends. I had to buy a cheap "semi-weighted" (sprung) action just to get a 73-key piano for travelling. I couldn't bring myself to buy the P-121 because I won't pay serious money for a GHS action, even though it is weighted and even though I love Yamaha sounds. Sadly, the promising Studiologic Numa X Piano (73) was out of stock - it would have been money well spent. Update: A year later, after trying a Yamaha P-125, I discovered that the GHS action is better than before, so I bought a P-121, which is the same but shorter and more portable. Now, both have been deleted from the catalogues, and there is only the 88-key P-225 to replace both models. If Roland made a 73/76-key version of the new RD-08, it could clean up.
I'm not really a piano player and I want this. Coming from 61-keys synth action player, I want to be able to play 88-keys without the ultra-heavy weight of a real piano action
Why are there big ass SUV , Suburban and trucks when I only need a smart car to take me from point A to point B ??? Whatever you think is good for you might not be for others . It’s called a free market and it’s based on choices. Nothing compares to the sound of an acoustic piano but how many people can afford one and how easy is it to transport it or take it to your gigs ?? I’m not a profesional player but I own 5 different keyboards according to different to different circumstances I come across. At my home studio I have a yamaha with with all the keys and functions you want close to an acoustic piano . But when the whether is nice outside I like to practice my piano in the backyard and I have a lighter keyboard for that purpose , then when I get crazy and want to play and serenade the seagulls at the beach , I have an 88 key Casio keyboard which is the lightest and slimmest keyboard in the market . I can hold it with only one hand or put it on my special bike rack . By the way, Ricardo Muti, a pianist and orchestra conductor carries one of these Casio keyboards when he travels . While staying at hotels he needs to rehearse without bothering others and these keyboards come handy . I’m glad there are all sorts of keyboards out there , if I had the money I would buy absolutely every single keyboard model out there, ranging from the affordable and light weight Casio to the more robust and complex nord keyboards .
Vão lançar 800 pianos por ano e não muda nada, o problema é preço. O que o mercado precisa hoje é de um instrumento bom e com preço acessível, pelo contrario podem lançar piano vermelho, azul, amarelo....não muda nada!
What is the main difference between the Liano and the B2, the specs are quite similar??? The B2 has at least a beautiful design compared with the Liano!
GOOOOOD CHOICE FOR A BEGINNER!!!! So I can practice at home with a sprung piano, and than go to my lessons and shittyplay my exercise on the wheighted one of my teacher.
Nice piano, I undestand it's price $300 USD I liked bedcause is lighter than the Roland FP10 wich is $500 USD, maby because is new but yesterday in MEX its tetail price was like the same. I Bouht the Roland.
Intanto in casa Yamaha dormono.Ho chiesto cento volte il perché non fanno una versione migliorata del Piaggero,con una tastiera simile al P125, e una sezione arranger come il Casio sx 3100,ed ovviamente essenziale come struttura.Non ho avuto risposta.
I don't know what's wrong with these companies?? No innovation noting new!! Just launching low value products with a very few features even when they could have easily included more features. People have to buy 10 products for 10 different needs even when they can be put in one product. Just make the customers buy more products. I expected something better from Korg.
I don't get who this is actually for. It doesn't seem to be for the VST and DAW crowd because there are other MIDI controller options that are better suited as controllers at that price point. It isn't for the piano student being it isn't weighted, graded, or hammer action. It isn't for the traditional piano player for the same reasons. It isn't for a gigging musician because it lacks the audio outputs. It lacks tools for the composer / arranger crowd. The casual player can find cheaper, better, and more compact options. This is for someone, but who I can't identify.
Excellent points, thanks. methinks its for the gigging musician EXACTLY because its so light, which explains why Korg spelled its lightweight piano with an 'L', lol. The live performer will need a phones adapter for output. Additionally he needs a ipad or tablet to access the DAW live... And some kind of music stand light to see the Liano's controls too.
I am guessing the keyboard is like the Casio CT-S1... not like the Yamaha P125, but is sort of like a real piano... it is about the "minimum acceptable" keyboard. Anything less, it will be the spring type, which is close to unacceptable
Would rather have real piano action adjustable, than speaker; and go buy or start making more good Organs ! Would rather have vibraphone & clavichord sounds and orchestral works?
"If you are not used to playing on weighted keys": so this is not for piano players right? Then why does it have 88 keys? To make it a less portable keyboard? Why not a 73 or 61 key weighted action as compact as possible? Why not? Why another (among million others) unweighted 88 key useless crap instead? Can a "product manager" answer this?
Stop acting entitled. Not everyone has the same sentiment on this product as yours. They are targeted to musicians who wants 88 keys and yet lightweight.
@@zdys2yllhso45 You don't get the point. 88 keys don't make any sense if they are not weighted. You don't play classical pieces on unweighted keys. Still don't understand that? No? So no, this is absolutely NOT targeted to musicians, it is the exact opposite of that.
@@argi0774 why not buy a toy? Or psr models from yamaha if you want portability? Why do you insist that this is a useless crap? Haven't you heard of the term niche market? I myself want 88 keys but lightweight if I go to a gig. Sorry but you sound like a spoiled brat. Better buy a casio
@@argi0774lighweighted 88 keys makes sense for church musicians who uses basic piano sound for sunday gigs. Dont act as if you know the needs of every musicians🤣
Just a damper pedal jack and no sustain pedal? Damper is nice if you want a little darker tone or to help play quieter, but I doubt anyone is going to want to use this to learn to play piano without a sustain pedal.
Another digital piano with the headphone jack in the back? And why isn’t there an option to offer this in another color besides black? I would pay extra to have another color option.
Purtroppo ho acquistato questo piano. Mentre si suonano delle note si puo osservare che la tastiera vibra su e giu. Poi tra il do e il re c è uno spazio esagerato di 2,5 mm rispetto agli altri stato. Dopo un ora l ho restituiito. A me non piace. Korg mi ha deluso
1:47 Piano1
1:59 Piano2
2:14 E.Piano1
2:36 E.Piano2
2:56 Harpsichord
3:07 P.Organ
3:26 E.Organ
3:42 Strings
That Electric Piano 1 is absolutely amazing
I am 100% just starting out on piano. I've been researching intro-level pianos. So far this looks like a great choice.
Just bought this one today !! Totally satisfied its a great choice for the ones who have just started to play and wanted to learn more !!
Yes. I understand the product.
All brands have a Digital Piano. Casio rules for some years in the segment.
Other brands have a DP for the commercial reasons. Not a great purpose, but the same and simple purpose: Make a realistic piano realistic feel.
Korg is trying with a DP with less immersion with de light keys, but with portability purpose. We don't seem it's since Roland RD-64 and SP4-7...
This is a DP focused in portability. It's the idea that the brands forgotten in the Digital Piano Wars.
I think it can be a bestseller with the beginner audience and they want a good piano tone but don't want to carry an anvil.
Studiologic numa compact 2 is so much better than this
Casio rules? Really?
Maybe not just for beginners. How about a pro that need light weight and battery powered?
to play music casually, or to have a lightweight MIDI controller, and to fit in a space such as in New York, Tokyo, where space in the house might be limited, it seems like a good choice, especially at $399 and for 88 keys
The organ demonstration was fabulous!
Love your playing with the second piano sound! Sooo good 😊
So Korg reinvented the Sudiologic Numa Compact 2/2x. Cool.
I bought this to return to playing piano after 15 years. I mosty use the piano1, and when I'm tired of the piano, harpsichord (it sounds amazing, and releasing the keys also have their own sound). I have no idea why piano2 exists, which sounds like piano through a wall. I also think "strings" should have been a single violin or some other instrument. The perfect instrument for me to suck, and try to suck less when trying to play my favourite scores. I basicaly bough back a part of my childhood which I missed all the time.
Wow! It doesn't have 500 buttons or an LCD screen with 8 million settings. I'm sold! I just want a digital piano that works like...a piano. This is what my tax refund will be going to! 👍👍
How did it go?
@@DanielCabrera-t9y It's AWESOME. It's a piano, not a wanna-be "everything". I live on the top floor of an old building and wanted a piano that is JUST a piano. This is PERFECT.
Very good for jazz and classic music,,!!!
This piano sounds good!!
That's a great keyboard. Wish they would add some bass sounds and a split function. Also a pitchbend wheel would be awesome!
Thats a Digital Piano, not a Synthesizer
What you want is a synthesizer
Liano 61-key version and Updated to full size keyboard (12key=165mm)🥰
@@flower-z6m I want Liano 61-key version too!!!
please an upgrade version of the Korg D1 with real USB midi and speaker
Yes, the D1 still has great features, though it lacks a few modcons. I just hope that if the much-wished-for D2 ever arrives (and it has USB) it still has the MIDI legacy input & output.
Curiously, the D1's exterior and spec look kind of similar to the old Yamaha P80 I used to use. Speaking of the P80: it had a more agile action than the GHS which Yamaha now favours.
The D1 for me is the best good looking one for that range very minimalistic it doesn’t need to have many sounds just the basic ones improved Pianos / EP / Organ /String/ vocals/ brass and Drums at least 2 or 3 of each
Layer/Split USB and onboard speakers it would beat the competition it would look even better than the Roland RD88
Basically would be the economic version of the Grand-stage
So Korg make it and I’ll buy it right away 👍🙌🏼
Is this "light action" a very light "hammer" action or just another "semi weighted" keyboard?
Do you plan to make a Liano 61-key version?
That would be my dream pliano.
(I'm sure there are other who might be interested in other key amount versions too like a 49-key version or 73-key version for example)
Thank you!
I really need you guys to make a video of how to transpose on the Korg Liano, please
Epiano 2 sounds great🥰
This is awesome
when it's going to come in India available?
It sounds great. I guess I’m one of those ppl who prefer heavier keys.
I also prefer heavier keys.
@@FernandoOliveira-ht6rz It feels more like a real piano when there heavier.
This korg Liano has heavy keys??
Now why would you prefer heavier keys?
@@kisha_music Because they trained and strenghten your fingers to be able to play of a real piano, which has heavier keys.
Weight is not so much an issue for portability. It's the format, I would buy this in a heartbeat if it could be folded into half like other cheap manufacturers are already offering, and voila carry one format. Check with your airline, it's light, yeah, but about 140cm long. Sucks, right? Need a flightless, pay 100 per trip extra, well, nope. I guess I buy one, take a Dremel, and DIY
lucianno with liano. What a combination.
Will you make a Liano 61-key version? Updated to full size keyboard (12key=165mm), thank you
Can you provide some info on the samples size and how many samples are used for each tome? The manual cagiely mentioned the piano tone uses three samples hence the polyphony is only 120/3=40. I don’t understand why you need three samples instead of two stereo Left and Right samples. I am also curious to know how many different velocity sample uses for the tone.
Can you connect to ipad iGrand App and then run the sound through to an external speaker?
good work and thank you so much, Greetings from Egypt
love the sound
Are there split and layering options? How much does it weigh? How is it as a controller for a workstation?
For a controller, you should look at the Novation Impulse 61 or Akai MPK88 (this one is discontinued). Arturia, Studiologic, and M-Audio offer alternatives, I know nothing about them other than they exist. Juno-DS88 makes for a great controller and can supplement your sonic arsenal, provided that your workstation isn't a Roland, otherwise it will overlap too much.
edit: Liano has no MIDI DIN output, you cannot use it as a controller, I am seeing
@@Jason75913 Not without a computer, anyway. As long as you also have a USB MIDI interface for whatever computer you use, it's cool, but that's gonna be limiting. Also, I'd pass on it because it doesn't have pitch bend or mod wheels. Unless you like drawing those events in your DAW or you don't use pitch bend or modulation in your music, this isn't the best controller out there. Korg probably made this to compete against the lower end Casio Privias and Yamaha's low-to-midrange pianos.
This is a economic version of piano, i got one of those mine is a Kawai ES110 and it's very similar to this one
And the Kawai probably sounds better 😎
The new kawai es120 is the best one!!
The Kawai ES110 is in a totally different league with it's graded hammer action. This Korg is more like a Yamaha Piaggero NP32 which has light synth-like key action.
Another 88-key slab. Why not 76 keys, with the board weighing only around 5.0 kg? If you want light, then do really light and keep the dimensions in length low. Just imagine if Casio would start making 76-key slabs again ...! The amount of functions in their new CT-S lineup is crazy and the tones sound great.
I love this idea. And please make the lowest note a C like on some of Korgs other 73 or 76 note keyboards, which is so much more useful than an E or F!
@@carlinlemon5884 Not it's not
To be fair, i would not buy a digital piano with less than 88 keys. There are numerous pieces, especially in the classical world, that require the full range of 88 keys.
@@20edo Would you buy unweighted keys to play classical pieces? Really?
@@argi0774 I was not aware the keys were completely unweighted, since there are even more affordable DP's than this one with at least half-decent weighted keys. I guess the main selling point is the low weight then.
great - but do we still need harpsichord?
Keren banget suara piano keyboardnya.
Nice 👍. Which accompaniment app where you using on the iPad
I wonder the same thing
2:37 remind me Dyno Piano
I'm curious how this LS key action compares to fatars light TP110 action.
Looks like it will be very shallow action, look at how skinny that thing is.
Isn't the TP110 properly weighted? If so I'd much rather have anything with the TP110.
Wow finally a digital piano that sounds like a piano, take notes roland
Nobody talks about touche dynamics. Which is very important in piano. Yamaha p 45 provide no touch dynamic.all keys sounds same.
Any expect here please explain me that I really wanna know how did he record both video and Liano voice while connecting iPad. What is his set up?
Does it come with music book stand and does it have dual sound like piano string,does it have transpose function
dang. Does korg have a similar class keyboard with a hammer action keybed. I would recommend that to beginners.
I would say the Korg SP280. It's more expensive but hammer action is always more expensive. If you don't need speakers, the D1 is an amazing value. Best keybed in class, and honestly my favorite digital piano keybed in general.
Nice!
Is this the same action as the Kronos LS88?
Yes
@@TheKorgDude interesting! I have a Kronos LS and wasn’t sure they were ever going to do anything else with that keybed.
@@JeffPalmer83 what are your impressions of the keybed?
@@Elazarko It was lighter than I expected at first, but I’ve grown very used to it. It’s actually extremely similar in feel to my old Korg KARMA, which has a great synth action.
I wish Korg would make an RD-88 equivalent.
@@madness8556 I would just save up a bit more and get the Nautilus 61 or SV-2 73 if I wanted a Korg stage piano that much. They also boast better sounds.
RD-88 would probably make me happier with its smaller size and the ability to import custom Zen-Core patches from my MC-707.
61 keys is enough for me, RD-88 is overkill there, plus in quality it is also even more overkill than what I already have. 🤣🤣
And I wish that Korg would make a shorter portable keyboard (fewer keys) but with a weighted action - kind of the opposite to what it's done on the Liano.
To be fair, there is the professional Korg SV... with 73 keys, but I was thinking of something like a shorter version of the B2 or the D1, but not the B2N, which lacks a weighted action.
Agreed. I owned an RD-88 since released and it's awesome. It would be great if Korg offered a portable stage piano with capability to tweak/multi-layer/modified sounds and built-in speakers. Korg Kross 2 (88 ver.) is quite close in comparison but lacks internal speakers. They should have a better version of the D1 stage piano with more capability to edit sounds & effects, and knobs/sliders to gain an easier access to functions/parameter changes for a live gig.
Did you connect it to the amp or you're just playing with built-in speaker?
Is there a easy key change function
hello. medium weight keys?
"This is Luciano with Korg (...) Liano Digital Piano" what a great Intro phrase haha
Don't be mean. Do you enjoy making fun of others? You should be ashamed of yourself. Luciano Minetti is the product mamager for Korg. And he did a nice presentation.
@@inthesunbythebeach What the heck are you talking about? I was just pointing out the fact that it rhymes
Does it have a stand like other digital Pianos?
interesting digital piano, wondering how the price is competitive enough in its market
500
i love this one, but maybe this product not avaliable in indonesia.
Do you sell in Egypt?
Is it standard keys?
I bought this board but you barely hear any reverb when pressing the button. How do you get the reverb stronger?
I'd advise buying a reverb pedal or dedicated external effects unit to run your keyboard through.
vs B2N? same keybed?
In case I didn't say so before, thanks for the video. Perhaps this instrument has a proper market, but I wonder. I hate to think of unsuspecting parents buying this for kids to take lessons on. It might serve for one year with absolute beginners, but then you only need 61 keys.
Many of us don"t need or want 88 keys, but most of us do want weighted actions, so I can't understand why manufacturers keep bombarding us with 88-key non-pianistic actions. How can you use the extreme keys anyway, when the action is so unpianistic?
Yamaha did it with the NP range too. Even when Yamaha added the 70-something-key model, the saved space was wasted by placing speakers at the ends.
I had to buy a cheap "semi-weighted" (sprung) action just to get a 73-key piano for travelling. I couldn't bring myself to buy the P-121 because I won't pay serious money for a GHS action, even though it is weighted and even though I love Yamaha sounds. Sadly, the promising Studiologic Numa X Piano (73) was out of stock - it would have been money well spent.
Update: A year later, after trying a Yamaha P-125, I discovered that the GHS action is better than before, so I bought a P-121, which is the same but shorter and more portable. Now, both have been deleted from the catalogues, and there is only the 88-key P-225 to replace both models. If Roland made a 73/76-key version of the new RD-08, it could clean up.
I'm not really a piano player and I want this. Coming from 61-keys synth action player, I want to be able to play 88-keys without the ultra-heavy weight of a real piano action
@@ze-ce.cra_ Good. I'm glad to see that it has a market - that it can make some players happy.
Why are there big ass SUV , Suburban and trucks when I only need a smart car to take me from point A to point B ???
Whatever you think is good for you might not be for others . It’s called a free market and it’s based on choices. Nothing compares to the sound of an acoustic piano but how many people can afford one and how easy is it to transport it or take it to your gigs ?? I’m not a profesional player but I own 5 different keyboards according to different to different circumstances I come across. At my home studio I have a yamaha with with all the keys and functions you want close to an acoustic piano . But when the whether is nice outside I like to practice my piano in the backyard and I have a lighter keyboard for that purpose , then when I get crazy and want to play and serenade the seagulls at the beach , I have an 88 key Casio keyboard which is the lightest and slimmest keyboard in the market . I can hold it with only one hand or put it on my special bike rack . By the way, Ricardo Muti, a pianist and orchestra conductor carries one of these Casio keyboards when he travels . While staying at hotels he needs to rehearse without bothering others and these keyboards come handy .
I’m glad there are all sorts of keyboards out there , if I had the money I would buy absolutely every single keyboard model out there, ranging from the affordable and light weight Casio to the more robust and complex nord keyboards .
@@excelence3866what is that lightest and slimmest Casio? I want to buy one
Yes, the 61-key version is better, preferably a full-size keyboard (12key=165mm)
🥰
does it have blutooth midi?
It's a very nice design and I like the simplicity aspect. I didn't hear anything about being able to transpose. Does it have a transpose feature?
Is this the same keyboard as the one you introduced as the ‘L1’ last year here: ua-cam.com/video/sNJhpluMe1U/v-deo.html ?
yes
Eletric Piano 2 remenber Dyno Piano 01W/FD or Pro
Can i use the USB port like a Midi port for pc programs?
Yes
The sound is good, but how are the keys?
Where can I buy one?!
You can preorder through retailers now, starts shipping in the U.S. in November.
Vão lançar 800 pianos por ano e não muda nada, o problema é preço. O que o mercado precisa hoje é de um instrumento bom e com preço acessível, pelo contrario podem lançar piano vermelho, azul, amarelo....não muda nada!
Fora do Brasil custa no máximo 400 dólares. Chega aqui por 5, 6 mil. Por isso a Casio ainda tem os melhores custo-benefício do mercado.
What is the main difference between the Liano and the B2, the specs are quite similar??? The B2 has at least a beautiful design compared with the Liano!
The main difference is the B2 has weighted keys, it’s a bit misleading to call the Liano a digital piano.
How much?
how do I plug it to an external pa system?
Using the headphones jack (you might need a special cable or an adapter converter)
Which means you'll need a 6.35mm to 3.5mm cable or just an adapter to convert one end of the cable to 3.5mm from 6.35mm
GOOOOOD CHOICE FOR A BEGINNER!!!! So I can practice at home with a sprung piano, and than go to my lessons and shittyplay my exercise on the wheighted one of my teacher.
Nice piano, I undestand it's price $300 USD I liked bedcause is lighter than the Roland FP10 wich is $500 USD, maby because is new but yesterday in MEX its tetail price was like the same.
I Bouht the Roland.
Intanto in casa Yamaha dormono.Ho chiesto cento volte il perché non fanno una versione migliorata del Piaggero,con una tastiera simile al P125, e una sezione arranger come il Casio sx 3100,ed ovviamente essenziale come struttura.Non ho avuto risposta.
You cant connect it to a PA system if you're looking at performing anywhere.
Well you could but not in a professional way (headphone jack) - but yeah otherwise you'll need to be connected to a computer and audio interface
How many of those sounds are there on a PA5X?
How to transpose ? There is no button for that
In your head
Why Ever tremolo into eléctrico piano 1?
price point?
$400 according to sweetwater
@@Jason75913 Thanks!
ossignore!
I don't know what's wrong with these companies?? No innovation noting new!! Just launching low value products with a very few features even when they could have easily included more features. People have to buy 10 products for 10 different needs even when they can be put in one product. Just make the customers buy more products.
I expected something better from Korg.
I don't get who this is actually for. It doesn't seem to be for the VST and DAW crowd because there are other MIDI controller options that are better suited as controllers at that price point. It isn't for the piano student being it isn't weighted, graded, or hammer action. It isn't for the traditional piano player for the same reasons. It isn't for a gigging musician because it lacks the audio outputs. It lacks tools for the composer / arranger crowd. The casual player can find cheaper, better, and more compact options. This is for someone, but who I can't identify.
Excellent points, thanks.
methinks its for the gigging musician EXACTLY because its so light, which explains why Korg spelled its lightweight piano with an 'L', lol. The live performer will need a phones adapter for output. Additionally he needs a ipad or tablet to access the DAW live... And some kind of music stand light to see the Liano's controls too.
Transpose should be on board
🌹❤
No dual or layering ;(
I am guessing the keyboard is like the Casio CT-S1... not like the Yamaha P125, but is sort of like a real piano... it is about the "minimum acceptable" keyboard. Anything less, it will be the spring type, which is close to unacceptable
thats my name...
I just want to know what watch bro’s got on….
Gonna need a bigger stand...😜
Would rather have real piano action adjustable, than speaker; and go buy or start making more good Organs ! Would rather have vibraphone & clavichord sounds and orchestral works?
Фамилия у этого Минетти ну оч говорящая
"If you are not used to playing on weighted keys": so this is not for piano players right? Then why does it have 88 keys? To make it a less portable keyboard? Why not a 73 or 61 key weighted action as compact as possible? Why not? Why another (among million others) unweighted 88 key useless crap instead? Can a "product manager" answer this?
I'm not really a classically trained piano player, and I want this. I want to play 88 keys without the ultra-heaviness of a real weighted action
Stop acting entitled. Not everyone has the same sentiment on this product as yours. They are targeted to musicians who wants 88 keys and yet lightweight.
@@zdys2yllhso45 You don't get the point. 88 keys don't make any sense if they are not weighted. You don't play classical pieces on unweighted keys. Still don't understand that? No?
So no, this is absolutely NOT targeted to musicians, it is the exact opposite of that.
@@argi0774 why not buy a toy? Or psr models from yamaha if you want portability? Why do you insist that this is a useless crap? Haven't you heard of the term niche market? I myself want 88 keys but lightweight if I go to a gig. Sorry but you sound like a spoiled brat. Better buy a casio
@@argi0774lighweighted 88 keys makes sense for church musicians who uses basic piano sound for sunday gigs. Dont act as if you know the needs of every musicians🤣
The piano is'nt ready in Indonesia 😅
I think korg should hire jeremy see for the product demos
Jeremy See did a review of this keyboard.
Luciano Minetti is the product mamager for Korg. He did just fine.
Only $400 ?!
Just a damper pedal jack and no sustain pedal? Damper is nice if you want a little darker tone or to help play quieter, but I doubt anyone is going to want to use this to learn to play piano without a sustain pedal.
Damper Pedal is another name for a Sustain Pedal. You're thinking Soft Pedal :)
@@vithormoraes oh you're right - totally thinking soft pedal! Thx!
It's so new I can't find a search result for it on Google, and where to buy it.
Another digital piano with the headphone jack in the back?
And why isn’t there an option to offer this in another color besides black? I would pay extra to have another color option.
KORG Liano - Bringing more fun to the piano with five new vibrant colors! (watch that video)
I can't understand why this is called a piano, without weighted keys
Give to me….
Please go back to E. Organ
piano with strings???? that special sound with piano and strings....???
Purtroppo ho acquistato questo piano. Mentre si suonano delle note si puo osservare che la tastiera vibra su e giu. Poi tra il do e il re c è uno spazio esagerato di 2,5 mm rispetto agli altri stato. Dopo un ora l ho restituiito. A me non piace. Korg mi ha deluso