It's been a about 6 weeks since I started my search for a digital stage piano and last night I finally bought one. I've done so much research that I thought I should share it with the rest of you. Below is every keyboad that I played.
First, here's why I was looking for a keyboard. I bought a Roland RS-9 about 3 years ago. It's semi-weighted and comes with a LOT of samples. None outstanding, but back then, I was young and naive so I was attracted to it's good looks. I play a lot of jazz and I also play wedding services (classical). Everytime I played the RS-9 I felt limited. I ended up hating the feel and the piano sound was quite moot. Finally, the knobs on it broke (stopped working) so I decided I wanted a new keyboard. A stage piano. I brought my RS-9 into Long&McQuade (music chain in Canada that has been AMAZING for me) to be repaired and my quest began.
I needed a keyboard with the following specs
- Great feel
- Great Piano Sounds
- Portable
Let the games begin.
Korg TritonI played this one in the store. It felt pretty good, but the piano sounds weren't anything to get overly excited for. It also comes with a lot of studio things like sequencers and huge sound banks, which I didn't really need so I didn't spend a lot of time on this keyboard.
Kawai MP9500This keyboard FELT amazing. The keys are made of wood and the action felt real (although, I found it sort of light, but not "fake" light. It felt like a real piano, with light action. Hard to describe). Anyway, it was a great keyboard, but weighing in at 85lbs, it wasn't very portable and therefore off the list.
Roland _______I am biased here. I've personally decided never to buy Roland keyboards again after the experiences with my RS-9. Not the keyboard itself, but their customer service. Shortly after I got it, the knobs stopped working. It was sent to Roland to be repaired on Warrenty and it took 6 WEEKS to get fixed. That's not acceptable. This second time, it is being fixed by a local guy, but he had to wait 5 weeks for the parts to come in, and then one was missing so he put in a rush order on the missing part and it took 2 weeks. For these reasons, I'm staying away from the Rolands.
Yamaha S90This keyboard was great. It had a very nice feel, and a TON of features. Most of which I realized I would never use. Plus, it was sort of heavy.
Yamaha P90Great little keyboard, and from what I hear is basically a P120 (see below) without speakers. I liked the idea of having speakers though since they act as a personal monitor when playing with an amp.
Kawai ES3 *Runner Up*L&M gave me one of these on a free loan while my Roland was being repaired since I needed a keyboard for a wedding. When I first played it, it felt great. The keyboard had a nice feel to it, and it had good action. The main grand piano sound was also quite nice, especially at the top and bottom of the range. I found the middle tones were a little blah though. After playing for 2 hours straight at the wedding, I also found the action was a little too light.
Yamaha P120 *Winner*This was the first keyboard I played in the store. To be honest, I didn't like the action the first time I played it. I found it almost TOO heavy. But then, after playing the ES3, I sat down on the P120 again and it felt just right. Last night I went and played the P120 for about 15 minutes straight... then walked away, talked numbers with the sales guy (I'm trading in my RS-9) and went back and played it for another 10 minutes. The piano sound on it was better than the ES3 in my opinion, and once you get warmed up, I found the heavier action to be much more desirable. I also found the speakers were OK for typical dittling around playing, and the RCA out was a plus.
So there's my experience. My biggest piece of advice to anybody looking to buy a new stage piano, GO AND PLAY THEM! I must have read every review on the net of every stage piano I could find. They give you good things to look for, but you won't truely know the piano for you until you play one. And I don't mean playing a couple chords. You have to sit there, and play. If I didn't take the ES3 home with me, I probably would have bought it. Because I had the opportunity to play it a lot, I decided the lighter action wasn't what I wanted in the long run.