The P-115 digital piano carries on the tradition of the best-selling
P-Series, with even more user-friendly features and improved sound
quality. Available in black or white finishes, the P-115 delivers Yamaha
piano touch and tone in a compact design and is ideal for home,
home-studio or stage use.
Top customer reviews
Great piano! (with comparison to Casio)
ByTony J.
I've only had this for a week and I'm already loving it.
The
first thing to note is its action. Yamaha calls this Graded Hammer
Standard (GHS), which is the most entry-level of Yamaha's fully-weighted
systems. The keys tend to be heavier than most uprights, and comparable
to the average grand piano (a little heavier than Yamaha but lighter
than Steinway).
The lower keys are weighted more heavily to simulate the
physics of a real piano. It took me a day or two to get accustomed to
the weight, but now it feels totally natural. GHS is not going to be as
good as GH/GHE/GH3 for repeated notes. For playing middle C as 16th
notes, it starts to get muddy around 120 with somewhat sloppy technique
(but is fine on good technique), becomes significantly more difficult to
play around 160, and becomes almost impossible at 200 even with the
best technique. I'm sure a higher-end keyboard will be better at this,
but in practice there just aren't that many pieces that require 16th
note repetition above 120, so it's not a dealbreaker.
The sound
quality is very good. Turning up the volume to max with touch
sensitivity set to normal produces a response which is most similar to
an acoustic piano. If you use headphones, you might want to turn it down
a bit, or it will hurt your ears. Throughout the range, the response is
very realistic, down to a pianissimo, though fortissimo could be louder
and have a more brilliant timbre. You can choose from a regular grand
piano or a mellower or brighter version of it. Initially I found the
default to be a bit too mellow, but I eventually got used to it; it's
only a matter of personal preference. There are other voices but I don't
know if I'd ever use them (except perhaps the harpsichord). If you want
tons of voices and fancy features then get the DGX650 instead.
As
for accurately recreating the sympathetic effects of an acoustic piano,
it has the basics down. A note played and held without pedal sounds
different from a note played and held with pedal. With a good pedal like
the LP5A, half-pedaling is supported. If you press the pedal, play a
note, release the note, press the note again without making a sound, and
release the pedal, the note will still be sustained. However, if you
hold down one key without making a sound and play the same note an
octave away (and release), the key will not sound, suggesting that
sympathetic resonance is only simulated locally without regards to other
keys which are pressed.
This keyboard is for beginners who want a
piano with realistic action but don't want to shell out thousands for
an acoustic before deciding whether to continue learning piano, or
advanced amateurs who used to play piano growing up but have now moved
out and can't fit a real piano in their new place or justify the
expense. I'm the latter case, but I wish I had such a piano when
starting out. We got an upright piano about 2-3 years into my learning,
and before that I was playing on an unweighted Yamaha that couldn't even
produce dynamics. If you're considering a $100 piano, I highly urge you
to get this one instead. If you can afford the tuition, then you can
afford the $400 difference in price to get a vastly different learning
experience.
The weight is substantial but still portable. The
best way to describe it is: I wouldn't want to drag around all the time
to perform, but it is very easy to set up in a small apartment and put
away in storage when it is not needed.
EDIT: I stopped by Guitar
Center the other day and tested out some other pianos for fun. Compared
to the P-115, the Casio PX-160 (its main competitor) has somewhat
heavier action and synthetic ivory/ebony keys which some people prefer,
but the sound quality of the P-115 is better in my opinion. The pedaling
effects are quite similar. Ultimately there are many more similarities
between the two than differences and you can't go wrong with either.
Joy of piano at a fraction of the cost.
ByCHRISTINE
We
love this digital piano. We got it as my 4-year-old daughter started
piano lessons and we did not want to buy a piano costing thousands of
dollars not knowing whether our daughter would take to piano lessons.
This digital piano has weighted keys and was recommended by our piano
teacher. It has brought live music and joy to our home and has made me
open up my old piano books from childhood too. And my daughter asks to
play it nearly/every day.
This is a great option for those who
want more affordability than a traditional piano and for those who have
limited space. It's also great because you can adjust the volume and has
a headphone option as well.
Incredible.
ByEvan
I
and all of my friends absolutely adore this piano. It's a great size,
and while heavy, fits on a lightweight X-stand well. The sound bank is
limited but incredible. If you want a true digital piano, and not a
synth or "keyboard" then this is a great choice. The piano sounds are
outstanding and the audio output is very crisp. Built in speakers are
nice as well. Great performance/travel instrument or home instrument.
Happy with the keyboard given the good price
ByAmazon Customer
This
is a good keyboard for those who want to have weighted keys. The only
criticism I would have is the feel of the keys -- they're plastic and so
don't feel as real. But having said that, it is a great price for what
you get. I'm only interested in the grand piano sound and that's pretty
good. There are other keyboards out there that have a better feel, but
they're more expensive (e.g. Kawai). The keyboard comes with a stand for
your books, and a simple pedal. There are matching accessories that you
can purchase.
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