Originally Posted By tony mads usa
If you want to preserve your music, software like Notation Composer is fairly easy to work with. You just connect to your computer via a midi connection on the KB and play ... Notation pretty much does the rest ...



This is interesting indeed. I used to make some musical notations using midi and Sonar, maybe I'll give it a try one day. But so far I find the best way to store my music is to make it public :-)


Originally Posted By rikkisbears
Beautiful music Kabinopus. Love the strings. You make the psr3000 sound wonderful.
I really enjoy listening to movie themes. John Barry I think would have to be one of my favourites, classics like Dances with Wolves, Out of Africa, Indecent Proposal, Chaplain etc , so many of them. Haunting melodies.

Do any of those Freeplay styles actually work on a psr3000?

That Cinema movie Ballad sounds great.


Glad that you liked it, Rikki. You named a lot of films I'm yet to watch.

As for freeplay styles, I had never been a fan of them on PSR-S950, so I never tried them on PSR-3000. But it's possible that I'd change my mind later.


Recently I tried once again to play the same music on my PSR-S950, somehow I didn't really enjoyed that. Then I switched again to PSR-3000 and it went much better (I mean, my dinner got cold).

Although if I were to go play public, I'd take my S950, as for some bossa nova or other popular music it has some advantages. Great guitar sound, audio styles, etc.

But I suspect that when a new arranger is being designed, everything is focused to make NEW voices and styles sound the best (they adjust DSPs, EQs, effects and so on). And what is left from older models is no longer a priority, so it will sound, but no one cares how well.

Well, it's just a theory. Bottom line is that I'm glad that I failed to sell my old PSR-3000. I guess, each model has some unique qualities.

I've just recorded one more "movie theme" on PSR-3000:



While playing that I was trying also to play a "bell tree" sound using the pedal, but it kept getting cut out, presumably, by the lack of polyphony. It made me think that if Genos has the same 128 voices of polyphony for internal sounds it's not that great for a such an advanced keyboard.