Members pogo97 Posted June 23, 2009 Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 For people with too much space? Never heard of "Ketron" neither. The universe holds some mysteries still. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members zzzxtreme Posted June 23, 2009 Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 there has been digital baby grand for over 10 years, if i remember correctly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members pogo97 Posted June 23, 2009 Author Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 ah, but why? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members zzzxtreme Posted June 23, 2009 Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 imho, like Yamaha Grandtouch, it uses real keys almost like a real grand piano, and the speaker placement is to simulate a grand piano, or some {censored}z. anyway, its fugly. it's not really baby grand size, it's premature baby grand Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Binkeys Posted June 23, 2009 Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 Ketron is an Italian arranger keyboard manufacturer. I bet that's one of their arranger models slightly tweaked and shoved into a "fancy" cabinet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Cygnus64 Posted June 23, 2009 Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 ah, but why? To go with their digital Grandfather clock. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members pogo97 Posted June 23, 2009 Author Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 To go with their digital Grandfather clock. with realistic swinging pendulum Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members pogo97 Posted June 23, 2009 Author Members Share Posted June 23, 2009 Actually, a local restaurant with lounge aspirations has a Kawai digital grand. It plays and sounds very nice indeed--speakers all over the place and Kawai's best keys and innards. The owner got it on blowout at Costco. Appropriate to a bar, where everything is illusion, but to a home? And yet, as Cygnus points out, people fill their homes with fake heritage objects. So, does this fill a human need or is it a hollow marketing ploy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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