Originally posted by Starkeeper:
You need to answer this question: Do you want to play a piano or an arranger?
The PSR3000 can do both, but they are played differently (see Fran's post above).
IMO, a TRUE piano player will not be able to trigger the arranger function. If the pianist some how plays a chord with a combination of left and right hand, then it will work, but this is not the way a TRUE pianist plays.
Starkeeper
[This message has been edited by Starkeeper (edited 02-14-2006).]
I'm new and have no idea how to play at all, except some things i learned in the long past to type in the keyboard to hear something..
and piano looks very crazy to me, that's why i want to start from something, that its learnable and won't take me 5 years, thats why i was thinking about getting a PSR-3000 which i assume i gonna buy next week and try to dig the ass of psrtutorial site which looks to me wonderful and great for a starter like me, and after few months, i'll see how it goes for me, playing songs of singers i like from 80's 90's, if all goes well, i guess then ill wanna learn piano and maybe then get intrument like a RD-700SX of Roland's and maybe even controll the PSR-3000 from it, if its possible even.
if there is any tips or final thoughts before im going to buy the PSR-3000 im here to hear

thanks
[This message has been edited by retal (edited 02-14-2006).]