22| The Piano
Sound
Pianet T
Pianet N
Hybrid Piano
Hybrid Tine
Wurly & Strings
FM & Strings
MK II & Pad
FM & Pad
Piano 1 (Acoustic)
German Grand
German Classic
Italian Grand
Italian Bright
Japanese Grand
Japanese Bright
Austrian Grand
Austrian Classic
Japanese Upright
Upright Bright
German Upright
Rock Piano
Piano 2 (Various)
Electric Grand
German Mono
KORG M1 Piano
KORG SG1D
Digital Piano
Electra Piano
Var
PC Notes
A3
14
The Pianet, the German electromechanical vintage
keys. The euro version of the electric piano.
B3
20
A4
15
Hybrid combinations of pianos, to explore new piano
soundscapes.
B4
21
A5
16
Different combinations of electric pianos and strings.
Choose between reeds and FM.
B5
22
A6
17
Different combinations of electric pianos and pads.
Again, choose between tines and FM.
B6
23
A1
24
The king of the acoustic pianos — the German grand so
universally beloved by classical, jazz and pop pianists.
B1
30
A2
25
The Italian grand piano, a finest choice for the classi
cal and jazz repertoire.
B2
31
A3
26
Another musthave — a Japanese grand, preferred by
many classical, jazz and pop artists.
B3
32
A4
27
The Austrian emperor's grand — a milestone for classi
cal programs, and the preferred by some jazz artists.
B4
33
A5
28 A big Japanese upright piano, with a very resonant
sound.
B5
34 An intimate, yet bright piano sound, frequently used
by popular pop bands.
A6
29 This is the distinctive, mellower sound of a German
upright piano.
B6
35
An aggressive upright for rock and rockabilly tunes.
A1
36
Electroacoustic piano produced in the '70s, with a unique
mellow sound very popular within gigging musicians.
B1
42 A mono version of the German grand. To be used
when playing through a small amplifier or a mono
monitoring system.
A2
37
The KORG piano heritage. From the popular M1 synth
workstation that made an era, and from our pioneeris
B2
43
tic SG1D digital piano.
A3
38 An innovative, accurate and expressive piano sound,
created in the late '80s with a popular digital key
board/synthesizer.
B3
44 A popular electronic piano from the '70s, used by
many famous classic rock and progrock musicians.