Product Description
With the Huntington KB61 black 61-key electronic keyboard, you get an incredible instrument at an excellent value. Easy to play, with a superb tone quality and a wide range of features and functions, this model is a great choice for beginner or intermediate players. Product Features: 61 Standard Piano Keys. Teaching Type Keyboard. 8 Note Polyphonic. Calibrated Chip for superior tone and tuning. 100 Rythms 100 Voices. 8 Stereo Demo Songs. 8 Panel Drum Presets. Single Chord Function. Finger Chord Function. Start / Stop with Sync. Fill In Function. Sustain and Vibrato. Transposition Function. LED Display. 32 Tempo Settings. 16 Volume Levels. 8 Rhythm Chord Volume Levels. A and B Guides. 1/4 Inch output jack. Stereo RCA output jacks. Power Adapter is included.
| List Price: | $89.99 |
| Price: |
$58.73 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
| as of Mon, 18 Mar 2013 03:27:13 GMT ***Remember, deals price on this item for sale just for limited time*** | |
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #226 in Musical Instruments
- Size: 61 Key
- Color: Black
- Brand: Huntington
- Model: KB61
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.00" h x 18.00" w x 40.00" l, 11.00 pounds
Features
- 61 standard piano keys, 100 rhythms 100 voices, 16 volume levels
- Teaching type keyboard, 8 stereo demo songs, 32 tempo settings, A and B guides
- 8 panel drum presets, 8 rhythm cord volume levels, LED display
- Single Chord function, Finger Chord function, Transposition function
- Start/Stop with Sync, Fill In function, Sustain and Vibrato, 1/4-inch output jack, stereo RCA output jacks
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
103 of 105 people found the following review helpful.Incredibly good value; great instrument for small space
By Steven Gournay
This is one hell of an amazon.com bargain; It's bigger than my last one, has more features, and the tone quality of the keyboard is superb. I am very happy with it, being a singer I need a good keyboard that is not pitched high but square on the notes, such as this one. It sits on my computer desk and can be easily put to the side with no fuss. This is a great value for the price and a very high quality instrument to boot!
63 of 64 people found the following review helpful.Cheap and awesome. So much fun
By J. D. Ngo
For the price, this keyboard is freaking awesome (I ended up trading in a few Wii games for Amazon credit, so this only ended up costing me $30). This keyboard is *huge*, the sound is pretty good, I love playing around with the instrument settings (especially Vibraphone and electric piano), and it actually comes with an AC power cord, headphone plug-in, and sustain button (things that apparently other more expensive keyboards don't necessarily have). It also just sounds good, and the upkeep is so much easier than a real piano. I have found myself playing most days, which is awesome since I haven't consistently had access to a piano since I was a child. I think I read a review somewhere that there's a metronome setting---not sure. There's so many buttons I haven't even learned yet. Finally, the amount of pressure that you have to put on the keys is very comfortable---I've played many pianos where the pressure to apply to keys was very awkward, so I had to push them so hard that the sound came out jagged. This keyboard actually makes me sound great :). I recommend this item.
52 of 55 people found the following review helpful.It's a piano, it works, and it is within small budgets.
By Greenwick
I will not sugar-coat this: This piano is cheap. If you need a piano for performance, this is not the piano for you. If you want a really inexpensive one for practice, or are only nominally interested in having a piano, then this is more suited to your needs. Because of the shortness of the keys, there will doubtless be notes you can't play - perhaps frequently if you play nothing but classical and baroque music.
For some perspective: My grandfather owned a music shop, and as a child and young adult I owned a $700 electric keyboard that was perfect in every way. Having gone without any access to a piano for six years now, I went on the hunt for something inexpensive that would satisfy my need to play. I find it good for getting by, but it is by no means my dream piano. Mostly it is for a bit of playing and to practice choral music.
-Headphones: For most regular headphones, you are going to need a cable. The usual small gold thing isn't going to work. I bought a YMR-197 from Hosa Technology. Try this one: HOSA STEREO 3.5mm PHONE (F) - TWO RCA (M 1-TIP AND 1-RING), 6 in. If you don't get one, you can't use headphones.
-Sound quality: It is perfectly fine on piano and most of the instruments. There is a wide variety of different types of instruments, and all sound similar or identical to instruments of the same names on more expensive keyboards.
-Quality of Material: The plastic used to make every part of this board is thinner than most other electric keyboards. However, it is very light and seems durable. You'll be able to see electronic circuitry below the keys.
-Guided practice: The visual display is limited, and the keys don't light up, so the only way for guided practice to happen with this keyboard is with audio. The song isn't labelled and I am still not exactly sure how the guided practice works, but if you can figure it out it would probably be great for learning non-visually.
-Compact: This thing can fit practically anywhere. It would sit nicely on a student desk. I am currently using a chair to sit it on.
Problems:
-54 keys: I wish I could have justified spending more money to get a longer keyboard, but that really isn't possible right now. While it is possible to play a large variety of songs, Bach is somewhat disappointing. I am saddened to find I can't play an extremely important note in the Toccata en Fugue in D minor. That was the main song I was hoping to work on with this keyboard.
If you can afford it, you will probably be much happier with a longer keyboard. However, $30 is a lot of money for about one octave, and could practically pay for another of these smaller pianos.
-Display: The display is one of the weirdest things on here. If you are trying to select an instrument, you won't see the numbers display digitally, despite the display being perfectly good.
-The songs: This piano comes with eight pre-loaded songs, but there isn't a listing for them anywhere. To play a song, you can either hit the 'song' button or the demo button. But to select a different song you have to hit the 'demo' button again two times. After you've done that, hitting the 'song' button will play that same song.
In all, if you are looking for a piano this cheap, you have doubtless already decided that you can make some sacrifices. This piano is full of those, but is definitely a very serviceable piano.
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