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Electronic Keyboard Stores Washington DC
Local resource for electronic keyboard stores in Washington. Includes detailed information on local businesses that provide access to electronic keyboard stores, electronic keyboards, digital pianos, synthesizers, keyboard amps, pro electric keyboards, portable electric keyboards, sound modules and drum machines, as well as advice on all the latest electronic keyboards, equipment and accessories.
Top One Ltd
1-301-320-3882 5310 Tuscarawas Rd Bethesda, MD 1-301-320-3882 5310 Tuscarawas Rd Bethesda, MD 20816
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Guitars & Fretted Instruments
Data Provided by: Foxes Music Co
1-703-533-7393 416 S Washington St Falls Church, VA 1-703-533-7393 416 S Washington St Falls Church, VA 22046
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music
Data Provided by: Jordan Kitt'S Music
1-301-345-3310 12303 Twinbrook Pkwy Rockville, MD 1-301-345-3310 12303 Twinbrook Pkwy Rockville, MD 20852
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral
Data Provided by: Victor Litz Music Center I
1-301-948-7478 306 E Diamond Ave Gaithersburg, MD 1-301-948-7478 306 E Diamond Ave Gaithersburg, MD 20877
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Guitars & Fretted Instruments
Data Provided by: Guitar Center #841
703-533-8500 6272 Arlington Blvd Falls Church, VA Chuck Levin's Washington Music Center
1-301-946-8808 11151 Veirs Mill Road Wheaton, MD 1-301-946-8808 11151 Veirs Mill Road Wheaton, MD 20902
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, DJ Equipment Store Information Instrument Rental: Yes Website Sales: Yes Lesson Information Clinics: Yes Instrument Repair Information On-Site Band Instrument Repair Shop On-Site Guitar/Bass Repair Shop On-Site String Instrument Repair Shop On-Site Speaker Repair Shop Hours Monday 10 AM till 9 PM Tuesday 10 AM till 6 PM Wednesday 10 AM till 9 PM Thursday 10 AM till 6 PM Friday 10 AM till 9 PM Saturday 10 AM till 6 PM Sunday Closed
Data Provided by: Guitor Center Inc
1-703-980-6089 3107 Furman Ln Alexandria, VA 1-703-980-6089 3107 Furman Ln Alexandria, VA 22306
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: S & S Music Inc
1-410-451-2160 2421 Crofton Ln Crofton, MD 1-410-451-2160 2421 Crofton Ln Crofton, MD 21114
Types of Instruments Sold Electronic Keyboard, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment Store Information Instrument Rental: Yes Instrument Repair Information Guitar & Bass, String & Tune-- 4&6 string 12 string / Classical tie end Floyd Rose Trem Includes restring, neck adjustment, and tuning. Violin & Viola-- Bridge notched String & Tune Cello-- Bridge notched String & Tune Visit website for a list of prices! www.sandsmusic.com Hours Monday - Friday 10:00AM to 7:30PM Saturday 9:00AM to 5:00PM Sunday 12:00PM to 4:00PM
Data Provided by: Music & Arts Center #30
703-820-3610 5849 Leesburg Pike Baileys Crossroads Shopping Center Falls Church, VA Jordan- Kitt Music Inc
301-513-1201 9520 Baltimore Ave College Park, MD
Data Provided by:
The Arturia Origin is a grand technical achievement, a true virtual modular synth cast in hardware. Its sound quality and deep programmability bowled us over when we reviewed the desktop module in June 2009. With its flip-up control panel, the Origin Keyboard aims to be a more integrated and inspiring instrument. Overview This review focuses on new features of the OS (version 1.3.23 as of this writing) and on things only the keyboard version can do. If you’re new to the Origin, read our original review first at keyboardmag.com/article/96559 . Drawing on the modeling developed in Arturia’s soft synths, the Origin emulates the distinct characters of the oscillators, filters, and other components of four famous analog synths: the ARP 2600, Minimoog, Roland Jupiter-8, and Yamaha CS-80. There are also generic oscillators (and other modules) that sound great but use less DSP, and wavetable oscillators to provide digital waveforms. You can freely arrange and connect these elements in an onscreen rack, creating frankensynths that would otherwise require a lot of time, money, and soldering. You can tweak the results (and the factory sounds) with a geek’s garden of knobs during your performance. Rounding it all out is a three-track, 32-step sequencer. You can also set ranges for splits and layers by pressing keys right on the keyboard.
Axel Hartmann, who’s pretty much the Ferdinand Porsche of the synth world, penned the physical design. Beyond being aesthetically striking, the substantial flip-up panel of the Origin Keyboard puts all the controls right in your face. You don’t have to look down at them or bend your neck, even slightly. This makes prolonged work much less fatiguing. I do wish Arturia had included a panel latch for transport. If you carry the unit with the bottom against your hip and the key lips pointing up, the panel tends to flip open unless you press a forearm against it, which is somewhat awkward. Also, you can’t put this sexy beast on the bottom of a two-tier stand, but who would want to? Keyboard and Aftertouch The action is quiet and fast, with textured black keys and a good amount of weight for a synth action. Octave shift buttons, which the desktop version lacks, are a welcome addition here. Almost nothing these days has true polyphonic aftertouch (the Infinite Response Vax-77 is a notable exception), but Arturia has added significant expressiveness with “duophonic” aftertouch, a feature exclusive to the Origin Keyboard. At the global level, you can decide whether only the highest, lowest, or last note played is affected when you apply pressure to any key. I found last-note priority to be the most musically useful, as I could build chords a note at a time, adding aftertouch (or not) to each note as I went along. A perennial complaint about aftertouch is that as you press down, the effect on the sound goes from nothing to full blast too quickly. The Origin Keyboard solves this with adjustable re... |
Click here to read the rest of the article from Keyboard Magazine
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Keybord Magazine is a trademark of New Bay Media, LLC. All material published on www.keyboardmag.com
is copyrighted @2009 by New Bay Media, LLC. All rights reserved |
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