Mate, you are AWESOME! I just found out about PSR 520 and it's cartridges, and im now in search of them! You're vid is just the thing that cleared all up!
Funny how I learnt of Street Life from this demo cartridge way before I heard the original version by Randy Crawford and The Crusaders. I fell in love in with the saxophone from that solo as a child (despite being a MIDI playback) and roughly 20 years later I ended up picking one up to play.
How many different Bonus cartridges are there? I have the PSR530 and it came with the cartridge with a brown label, saying XG SONG logo on the left, Copyright 1997, "For PSR530 Only" The songs on it are entirely different. Also how many retail cartridges might have existed? I suppose i have seen a catalogue but i don't recall seeing anyone actually carrying them. Inside the cartridge, the PCB reads "PSR320~620 MUSIC C". The casing carries marks from the tool signifying that the material got changed from PS to the less brittle ABS.
when I finally do get a psr 330 I am also gonna track down all the music cartridges that came with it if any still exist. I know I will likely find the bonus one as everyone who baught one back in 1997 likely kept it for just that purpose I don't know how many were released for the psr 330 or infact the predicessor to this keyboard hardly even had a bonus music cartridge and that released the year before
no actually, you can download these midi files. yamaha releaced them as included factory floppy disk songs for the psr 740, psr 730, and psr 8000. for the psr 740 though they came included but for the 730 and the psr 8000 you would buy them. the files are hosted on psrtutorial.com just go to the songs link and click on yamaha and you will find some of the songs, you will find carousel, williumtell overture and that space like one along with a bunch of really cool high quality midi files that still sound good today even on my psr e463
@@HuseynMemmedov unfortunately that one is not a yamaha orrigenal so they couldn't upload it because of copyright restrictions. don't know the orrigenal artist who sung it though. I will eventually go threw my collection of floppies I got with my psr 8000 last year and see if I actually have the factory floppy because if I do I will upload some of the songs and show these off. I have also reviewed my own keyboards but appologies if you are unable to see things as I am a visually impaired musician. I will not be upgrading my psr 8000 any time soon as I plan to keep it as it is with the floppy drive installed
The original artist of the song is The Crusaders group. I have a Yamaha PSR-A1000 with floppy replaced with USB emulator. (I had a bunch of floppies which corrupted now) I also have a Tyros 4 bought back in 2019. I’ve tested old Yamaha demos on these and they sound good.
@@HuseynMemmedov even though I said I had a complete collection after getting the yamaha psr 220 I will eventually find a psr 330. but yes, old yamaha keyboard demo songs are the best
Mate, you are AWESOME! I just found out about PSR 520 and it's cartridges, and im now in search of them! You're vid is just the thing that cleared all up!
Funny how I learnt of Street Life from this demo cartridge way before I heard the original version by Randy Crawford and The Crusaders. I fell in love in with the saxophone from that solo as a child (despite being a MIDI playback) and roughly 20 years later I ended up picking one up to play.
Omg!!! I love you bro. This was childhood keyboard 😭 😢 Thank you😊
How many different Bonus cartridges are there? I have the PSR530 and it came with the cartridge with a brown label, saying XG SONG logo on the left, Copyright 1997, "For PSR530 Only" The songs on it are entirely different.
Also how many retail cartridges might have existed? I suppose i have seen a catalogue but i don't recall seeing anyone actually carrying them.
Inside the cartridge, the PCB reads "PSR320~620 MUSIC C". The casing carries marks from the tool signifying that the material got changed from PS to the less brittle ABS.
when I finally do get a psr 330 I am also gonna track down all the music cartridges that came with it if any still exist. I know I will likely find the bonus one as everyone who baught one back in 1997 likely kept it for just that purpose I don't know how many were released for the psr 330 or infact the predicessor to this keyboard hardly even had a bonus music cartridge and that released the year before
It cool
I know it is
Can you upload these MIDI Files to somewhere else? Or they’re protected as usual?
no actually, you can download these midi files. yamaha releaced them as included factory floppy disk songs for the psr 740, psr 730, and psr 8000. for the psr 740 though they came included but for the 730 and the psr 8000 you would buy them. the files are hosted on psrtutorial.com just go to the songs link and click on yamaha and you will find some of the songs, you will find carousel, williumtell overture and that space like one along with a bunch of really cool high quality midi files that still sound good today even on my psr e463
@@jordanlivesey4715 I know this site. But i can’t find Street Life which is, the coolest...
@@HuseynMemmedov unfortunately that one is not a yamaha orrigenal so they couldn't upload it because of copyright restrictions.
don't know the orrigenal artist who sung it though.
I will eventually go threw my collection of floppies I got with my psr 8000 last year and see if I actually have the factory floppy because if I do I will upload some of the songs and show these off. I have also reviewed my own keyboards but appologies if you are unable to see things as I am a visually impaired musician.
I will not be upgrading my psr 8000 any time soon as I plan to keep it as it is with the floppy drive installed
The original artist of the song is The Crusaders group.
I have a Yamaha PSR-A1000 with floppy replaced with USB emulator. (I had a bunch of floppies which corrupted now) I also have a Tyros 4 bought back in 2019. I’ve tested old Yamaha demos on these and they sound good.
@@HuseynMemmedov even though I said I had a complete collection after getting the yamaha psr 220 I will eventually find a psr 330. but yes, old yamaha keyboard demo songs are the best