Yamaha MOXF6
Outdated Product $1,339.96 up to $1,461.00 Type: work station; Number of keys: 61; Size: full size; Mechanics: active; Rigidity: semi-weighted; Polyphony (voices): 128; Built-in timbres: 1353; Auto accompaniment; Accompaniment styles: 256; Sequencer (recording); Built-in compositions; Timbres layering; Keyboard split; Arpeggiator |
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Catalog Yamaha 2024 - new products, best sales and most actual models Yamaha.
Tools from the Japanese company Yamaha are a guarantee of reliability, convenience and a reasonable price. All these qualities are united in the MOXF6 keyboard model.
Enviable lightness
With dimensions of 1030x125x358 mm and a light weight of 7.1 kg, the tool is the lightest and most compact workstation from the manufacturer, and does not create inconvenience in transportation.
richness of sound
The model has 1353 built-in tones of piano, electric piano, bass, guitar, drums, strings, orchestral, vintage and modern synthesizers. They all sound pretty realistic, except for the guitars. Despite the presence of the effects of harmonics and slides, they still have a "plastic" sound. But you can connect a "live" guitar to the station, or use a sample from external libraries. There is no sampler in the car, but the sound content is expanded up to 1 GB using a flash drive, so you can download ready-made timbres and samples, including free ones.
Field for creativity
In the “Performance” mode, the model can play up to 4 parts, as well as overdub them one on top of the other and play in Split mode — splitting the keyboard. A 16-channel sequencer allows you to record songs without the help of a computer. If you need more options, you can connect the station to a PC or laptop running Windows or Mac and work in Cubase, Logic, SONAR.
Connectivity
The USB interface of the station supports the simultaneous exchange of audio and MIDI data with a computer. There, on the rear panel, there are MIDI in-out-thru connectors, a headphone jack, guitar and microphone inputs with support for vocoder mode. Also, 2 pedals can be connected to the station: a sustain and a controller(the pedals themselves are purchased separately), and, of course, an external speaker system.
Against the backdrop of such decent functionality, a full-fledged “piano” keyboard would probably not hurt, but the manufacturer used it in the older MOXF8 model. Here, for the sake of lightness and compactness, limited to 61 semi-weighted keys.
The real drawback is the small monochrome display. Although, with a colour sensor, the model would be clearly more expensive.
MOXF6 is a compact workstation at a bargain price (about 1500 USD), for working on stage and in the studio. But like most of these tools, it has a complex interface that requires learning.