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Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
Hey Gordon, I hadn't heard of Keytron, thanks for putting it on my radar. From what I can see, this is another extremely powerful instrument. I wonder why this brand is not carried by GuitarCenter here in the States.

And although the multi-bass looks like a great feature, no way am I going to let this (or any) machine have all the fun smile
Keytron Event

Ketron are a bit strange in their marketing. I presume they're a relatively small company and they're Italian which may make them a little uncomfortable in English-speaking markets.

The Event is very impressive, for a price(!), but the older SD9 and SD90 are not so far behind and are still around. Thomann handle them. There's a guy on YouTube Tiho who does quite a few videos about them.

Ketron's website focusses on the Event models, which are their new flagship series. They're also represented on FaceBook.


Jazz relative beginner, starting at a much older age than was helpful.
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Just a heads up.
A few years back the Keytron US center was non-responsive for some.
Not sure if that has changed.

Keytron used to be talked about a lot on this forum prior to that.
I don't think they have much representation/repair anywhere in the USA as of late.


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Originally Posted by rharv
Just a heads up.
A few years back the Keytron US center was non-responsive for some.
Not sure if that has changed.

Keytron used to be talked about a lot on this forum prior to that.
I don't think they have much representation/repair anywhere in the USA as of late.
I think there have been some changes.

There used to be two websites that may or may not have been the same company. ajamsonic.com has disappeared and the only site now, I think, is ketron.us. The website is responsive, whether the people are, I couldn't say.

BTW, there's no Y in their name, despite it usually being pronounced as if there is.


Jazz relative beginner, starting at a much older age than was helpful.
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Fair point. I did spell it wrong.
I wasn't talking about a website though, I was talking somewhere you can try it out and take it if it needs service.

I had a W-30 back in the day.
I now prefer to keep my studio modular.
I priced their top Event model with all the bells and whistles.
$6500.
For what is a single point of failure set up.

I prefer having it a little less dependent on one item, for example if a keypad fails I can grab a different keyboard from the closet and at least keep making music.


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Yes, agree entirely. Not so dissimilar to Korg or Yamaha prices, of course.

The EVM offers an alternative arrangement, but the costs still all adds up and one also then has yet more boxes and cables to carry around and interconnect. Just going to jams with my Kawai, I have the keyboard, stand, pedalboard, seat, PA, tablet and a bag of cables. I don't really want also a laptop, sound module, screen, more cables. crazy


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Originally Posted by rharv
Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
Originally Posted by rharv
What WOULD be cool, was a keyboard that could use BiaB generation with a good MIDI soundset
Then you might have something!
Throw in Ultrpak/Audiophile/FLAC RT sound set and wow ..

Just a thought for Peter and team <grin>
That may blow the keyboard auto-accompaniment world up
I think this is essentially already done.
Korg PA5X

Holy crap! It's $5k. That's a bit much..
You could have 10 BiaBs for that.
rharv, I think you are comparing apples to oranges. BiaB and arranger keyboards are both useful in their own right but are in entirely different categories.

Clearly you are quite astonished at being able to buy multiple BiaBs for the price of 1 Korg Pa5X.

This is how society has established worth, for which I obviously have no influence.

Are you saying that to close the gap, Korg must lower their price-point or PGMusic should raise theirs?


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Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
This is how society has established worth, for which I obviously have no influence.
Though Arranger keyboards also comprise quite a bit of hardware, which will account for quite a bit of the price and will also contain profit margins for distributors and retailers. PGM mostly sells direct to the customer.

I most certainly agree that society sometimes has a quite bizarre understanding of worth.


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Oh, I understand worth.
$5k could get a fair amount of studio time with real musicians.

For my circumstances (and that's where value To ME is based) I have much better use for that kind of money.
I have access to decent musicians as most people here know.
I also think that particular price involves quite a bit of profit.
Sure, there's the R & D but I disagree on how cheaply these can be mass produced.
They try to balance price/demand/profit/cost based on a desired profit margin.

The formula is not based on how to sell the most units, it is based on maximizing profit.

And no, I don't think PG should raise their price as they rely on a good amount of return business and do by well at balancing that equation.
I'm sure they could make more per unit, but overall they would lose more return customers.

Last edited by rharv; 10/20/25 02:46 PM.

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Originally Posted by rharv
I also think that particular price involves quite a bit of profit.
Sure, there's the R & D but I disagree on how cheaply these can be mass produced.
They try to balance price/demand/profit/cost based on a desired profit margin.

The formula is not based on how to sell the most units, it is based on maximizing profit.
My thumb-rule for costing was that I had to be able to make a product for 1/6 of the planned retail price. That may be nearer 1/5 in USA, where you don't have our typically 20% VAT.

20% goes to government in tax.
40% goes to the retailer.
20% goes to the wholesaler/distribution.
~17% is the cost to make.
~3% covers ancillaries, and profit.

I still find that shocking and have to do a reality check, but that's pretty much how things are.


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I've also got a Korg M1. I wonder what it's worth nowadays?


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Originally Posted by MarioD
I have stayed out of this conversation as I have little knowledge about chord sequencer keyboards but I hope someone can help me understand. I watched the video and it looked like it took a number of presses on the touch screen to get a chord sequence. I have DLed a MIDI song, brought it into BiaB so the chords are inserted into the chord window, picked a style, then pressed generate. I can also have a BiaB demo song put into the chord window. IMHO, and I may be wrong about this, both processes are easy to execute and have thousands of styles to pick from in the styles window. Note that I can use both RTs or MIDI styles. Granted PGM could have a better filtering system for picking a style but to me BiaB is the better route to take. YMMV

PS - Steve this is no knock against you or anyone else into chord sequencer keyboards. I'm just trying to understand. Noted that you will need a keyboard along with BiaB so that is another expense.
Mario, I may not be able to help you understand the finer points of arranger keyboards, indeed, the reason this thread exists is for me to learn more about them. But maybe this thread can help you understand a bit about why I want one.

I don't doubt that BiaB and MIDI can do many great things but they are not portable keyboards, and that is my need. I agree that BiaB desperately needs better filtering capability. I also agree that several key presses are needed to get things done on arranger keyboards. But would't one expect that to be the case?


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Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
Originally Posted by MarioD
I have stayed out of this conversation as I have little knowledge about chord sequencer keyboards but I hope someone can help me understand. I watched the video and it looked like it took a number of presses on the touch screen to get a chord sequence.
Mario, I may not be able to help you understand the finer points of arranger keyboards, indeed, the reason this thread exists is for me to learn more about them.
Both of those statements make me a bit concerned that there's possibly a misunderstanding going on here.

"Arranger keyboards" are not necessarily "chord sequencer keyboards". The subject line conflates the two things.

Generally what an arranger keyboard does is recognise a chord you play in the left hand end of the keyboard and play a backing pattern that fits with that chord. They very often do not include any kind of built-in chord sequencer. The button or touch-screen presses control variations on how the backup 'players' play, usually (invariably?) from simplest to most complex.

Some do include a chord sequencer, but one would have to look fairly closely at the documentation to be sure what and how that's done.

I think it's likely that most or all arranger keyboards can be controlled from a MIDI sequencer, e.g., like the BiaB "chords" track, though again one would have to look closely at the documentation to be sure.

Unless the arranger has a built-in chord sequencer, one would still need an external sequencer for it. Edit: That is, to get automated chord sequencing, rather than having to play them yourself.

Arranger keyboards take some practice to use ... the chords often have to be played at the right time, usually slightly ahead of the beat, to avoid messy or missed chord changes, and those other buttons or pedals usually have to be pressed as well, if only to switch to the end sequence. They have rigid timing, which also isn't always what one wants, though a bit of planning can often get around that.

None of that is intended to discourage, but it is intended to help assure that you understand the tool better.

As ever: caveat emptor.

Last edited by Gordon Scott; 10/21/25 04:54 AM.

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Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
...................................

I don't doubt that BiaB and MIDI can do many great things but they are not portable keyboards, and that is my need.................................

Thanx Steve that answers my question. I did not know your need for portability and thought that you were going to use it in conjunction with BiaB. Thus the reason for my confusion and message.


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Originally Posted by rharv
Oh, I understand worth.
$5k could get a fair amount of studio time with real musicians.

For my circumstances (and that's where value To ME is based) I have much better use for that kind of money.
I have access to decent musicians as most people here know.
Just like BiaB and arranger keyboards are apples and oranges, so too is how we measure worth.

I have no interest in spending $5K for "real musicians". Such expensing would not only be one-and-done, but they'd be having the fun.
Having said that, more power to them and I wish for their success in this age of music software, arranger keyboards and AI.

From my perspective, spending that money on a modern keyboard will give many years of creative joy, self-learning, exploration and collaboration/jamming with others; all items that I assign high value to.

But to each his own. I suppose that's why they make chocolate, strawberry and other flavor ice creams, not everyone prefers vanilla.

As for profits going to Korg, Yamaha, Roland and other instrument designers/manufacturers, again I say more power to them. Someone has to innovate and produce the instruments we all want and need. The engineers, programmers, musicians, manufacturing people and others that toil at these companies certainly need to earn a living and put food on their tables.


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Oh I agree with all the above.
Like I said, They make that balance/decision of price vs units sold.
I think some products price above that balance, but that's just my opinion. As in my PGMusic example; PGMusic could charge more but would lose a repeat buyer market.
At some point the cost of producing the product becomes cheaper, if you sell enough of them.

And trust me, I don't pay $5k for musician time. I (and another) invested in and maintain a small local studio that musicians enjoy, hence my access to decent musicians. At very little cost overall.
"Yeah, we can give you cheap studio time, wanna jam on some of our stuff too?" works very well for us.
Plus we can do it at our leisure.

The whole thing was based on 'value to me', which is the only way I can honestly define value (and I thought I made that clear, even in your quote).
YMMV, and likely will, so I'm not arguing.


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Originally Posted by Gordon Scott
Both of those statements make me a bit concerned that there's possibly a misunderstanding going on here.

"Arranger keyboards" are not necessarily "chord sequencer keyboards". The subject line conflates the two things.

Generally what an arranger keyboard does is recognise a chord you play in the left hand end of the keyboard and play a backing pattern that fits with that chord. They very often do not include any kind of built-in chord sequencer. The button or touch-screen presses control variations on how the backup 'players' play, usually (invariably?) from simplest to most complex.
I agree.
And I don't get too hung up on the term "arranger keyboard" but I do want a keyboard that thas chord sequencing/chord progression capability where one can enter in custom chord progressions. I'm noticing such keyboards typically come with a lot of other bells and whistles, like many different styles which is a good thing. The technology in this area is really quite impressive.


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Originally Posted by Bass Thumper
And I don't get too hung up on the term "arranger keyboard" but I do want a keyboard that thas chord sequencing/chord progression capability where one can enter in custom chord progressions. I'm noticing such keyboards typically come with a lot of other bells and whistles, like many different styles which is a good thing. The technology in this area is really quite impressive.
I notice that some of the higher-end such keyboards get described as "Workstation", rather than "Arranger". I presume by that that they mean they do more than "just" the arranger function Some of them are very impressive, though of course take some mastering.

My usual method for deciding if something like that does what I want is to download the manual, search it with suitable keywods and read the relevant bits. That can be tedious/frustrating.

Good luck on your search.


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Now Workstation I can get on board with.
THAT I have spent over a grand on and loved it. So much value at the time.

If only we knew the OP's budget .. big or small.
That Roland may be the best choice for his budget/needs. Or maybe he has a bigger budget, I don't recall that ever being defined (but it's a long thread)


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Originally Posted by MarioD
Thanx Steve that answers my question. I did not know your need for portability and thought that you were going to use it in conjunction with BiaB. Thus the reason for my confusion and message.
Yeah, portability is a big requirement.
And although I'm not specifically planning to integrate BiaB with this keyboard, it will be possible via USB, line-outs and my DAW; so I'll never say never. I've learned that unplanned connections between various tools in the toolbox are quite possible and can be a rewarding part of the creative process.


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Originally Posted by rharv
Oh I agree with all the above.

And trust me, I don't pay $5k for musician time. I (and another) invested in and maintain a small local studio that musicians enjoy, hence my access to decent musicians. At very little cost overall.
I think we had a bit of misunderstanding before, I thought you did pay thousands for musician time.
Now that I know you manage/own a studio where decent/pro musicians frequent, you should invite them to this forum.

I'd love to hear what they have to say about mid to high-end keyboards and even what they think of BiaB.


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