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India Press Store - Casio SA75 Keyboard with Headset Microphone

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List Price: $69.95
Our Price: $41.19
Your Save: $ 28.76 ( 41% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Casio
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Batteries Included: 0 Batteries: 4 Battery Description: 4 AA Binding: Electronics Brand: Casio Color: gray EAN: 0079767321017 Feature: On-screen music staff displays notes played while icons indicate the beat Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Label: Casio Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product. Manufacturer: Casio Model: CAS SA75 Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Casio Studio: Casio
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Features
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On-screen music staff displays notes played while icons indicate the beat 10 demo songs with a melody-off control Four-note polyphonic with 100 PCM tones 30 patterns include 10 rhythms, 10 free sessions, and 10 funny modes Runs on five-AA batteries or AC adapter (not included)
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Great keyboard! Comment: This is a fabulous keyboard--excellent sound, when playing in "piano" mode, it sounds just like an actual piano is playing! It has lots of great extras and a tempo adjuster, we love it. My four star rating is only because it doesn't come with an A/C adapter so you have to buy one separately or use 5 AA batteries, which kind of stinks. Overall though, great product.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Casio small keyboard Comment: Though not a full keyboard, it satified my needs without taking up much space. Tone and quality were quite good.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Wonderfully inexpensive gift for that tween Comment: Bought this for my daughter's 9 th birthday. She absolutely LOVES it! She says she "can rock on like Hannah Montana." The headphone did not last a week, but the keyboard is a wonderful product.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An OK Keyboard With a Few Annoying Quirks Comment: My wife and I are professional musicians and teachers, so we are quite discerning and expect a lot when it comes to musical instruments, even if they are inexpensive electronic keyboards. Although this keyboard does what it says and basically is as described, there are a few design quirks that could have easily been remedied which would have made this an exceptional keyboard, rather than just a mediocre one.
First--and I think this was mentioned in other reviews--the volume issue is extremely annoying. Even at the lowest setting, it is pretty loud. If you are planning on giving this to a child, watch out! Every time you turn it on, it resets to the loudest volume setting. Our son is two years old, and he's figured out the surest way to annoy us: keep turning the keyboard off and on, which resets the volume to full blast mode. He really enjoys this, of course, but it annoys us to no end. We are mystified as to why Casio didn't design this keyboard to reset a medium volume setting or even the lowest volume. The loud setting is too loud even for us, and we live and breathe music.
Furthermore, every time the keyboard is turned off and on, not only is it super loud, but it resets to a awful-sounding hip-hop version-sounding Beethoven's Ode to Joy. They could have easily designed this to stay on the last song selection. There should be an option to allow people to let it store the last song.
Our last main complaint is that it's not as easy as it should be play the keyboard along with the stored songs. Casio really expects you to only play a melody with the songs, hence the very limited four-voice polyphony (this means that you can only play four notes at once). If you want to play a full chord with a root, third, fifth and seventh (a V7 or MM7 chord, for example) or a 9th chord along with a melody, you are out of luck. It will only let you play four notes at once, so your chords (such as a left hand accompaniment) will be limited to triads. For a little more money, you can purchase a keyboard that has 16-note polyphony, which will allow you to play true accompaniment with melodic lines.
There is no pedal jack, which might not be that big a deal for a beginner, but somewhat limits your learning how to play a keyboard.
Other than the previously mentioned quirks, the keyboard is somewhat well made. There are 100 "tones" (poor-sounding keyboard sounds, such as piano, electric piano, organ, etc.--the Amazon summary says "top notch", but they're not), 30 patterns (rock, swing, samba, waltz, etc.), and 10 songs. This keyboard supposedly allows you to turn off the melody, but apparently, will not allow you to do that with the all of the songs in the sound bank--just a few, such as the Skater's Waltz. When you turn off the melody, you can play along, but otherwise, you can't. This seems silly to us. The quality of the songs themselves is OK at best, as you would expect from a low-end Casio keyboard. (You can play will all of the patterns, however.) If you're expecting a real orchestral or rock band sound, you're in for a surprise. It sounds like a merry go round toy. Our son doesn't know the difference (and many consumers won't care), but we can tell.
The LCD screen is OK, but very tiny, and our guess is that most people will ignore it. The staff that the notes appear on is less than an inch wide, which is NOT at all how musicians read music. They could have easily made the LCD screen 3 times longer so you could see three notes at once, or even a whole phrase. After all, when you start to read real music, you will read off a whole page, not a tiny LCD screen, one note at a time.
It's not all bad: the keyboard includes a headphone jack and the batteries last a long time, which is great.
All in all, if you don't have a child, this keyboard might prove adequate for learning how to play a melody with a pattern or song, but there are certainly other options out there that are a LOT better than this one. If we could do it all over again--and we probably will--we will definitely purchase a different keyboard. As an educational tool, we have to give this "two thumbs down."
Customer Rating:      Summary: Nice sounding, very portable keyboard Comment: This is a surprisingly nice sounding keyboard, especially for the price. It is compact and light weight. I would like to add that there is a headphone jack on it. The description of it, states it does not have one. Casio must have recently added the headphone jack. Keep in mind, as other reviewers have mentioned, the lowest volume "volume 1" is not all that low. It is of medium volume through the headphones, as well as through the speakers. This is a lovely little keyboard with many features that are usually only found on more expensive models.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Designed for the young or beginning musician, the Casio SA-75 Starter Musical Keyboard provides enough features and functions to get anyone to enjoy and learn to play music without having to invest a lot of money. And thanks to a microphone headset included in the package, your aspiring musician can even sing along over the amplifier without having to take his or hands from the keys. The Casio SA-75 features 100 top-notch PCM tones, as well as 30 accompaniment patters including 10 rhythms, 10 free-sessions, and 10 funny ones. This musical keyboard also features an LCD-screen musical information display system that includes a music-staff which displays the notes that are being played and as well as icons that indicate the beat. Additionally, the SA-75 has the option of turning off the melodies so that the student can play the songs with just the notation. This Casio keyboard has 37 keys, with a maximum polyphony of four notes. Two speakers are built in to the keyboard, but users should note there is no line-out or headphone jack. This keyboard runs on five AA batteries (not included), or can be run via an AC power adapter that can be purchased separately. What's in the Box Casio SA-75 musical keyboard, and hands-free headset microphone.
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