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YamahaPSR-EW410 Keyboard & Ritter Keyboard Bag

R9,299

Retail: R14,500
About

PSR-EW410 is the best 76-note keyboard for performing various styles of music, from the latest to vinyl favorites, featuring a high-res piano sample, powerful on-board speakers and easy-to-use professional features like assignable Live Control knobs, Quick Sampling, Groove Creator, USB Audio Recorder and optional subwoofer.

The PSR-EW410 is the new flagship of the Yamaha's popular PSR-E series and offers the most advanced feature set. The PSR-EW410 makes a perfect first keyboard for students, a solid educational tool for classrooms, and a fun, lightweight travel instrument and compositional tool for professionals. Each of the EW410's 76 full-sized, organ-style keys provides good resistance with a quick response that's suited for playing dynamic string pads to quick brass lines and synth leads. And speaking of instruments: the EW410 comes loaded with 758 rich stereo voices, which means students and recording artists will never be short on inspiration. And for purists, a one-touch Portable Grand function bypasses all advanced features to provide a lush, distraction-free grand piano sound with 48-note polyphony. Its intelligent backing tracks, a USB port for thumb drives and MIDI connectivity, and the included 9-lesson Yamaha Education Suite round out the PSR-EW410's value-packed features.

This set includes a Ritter keyboard bag to make transporting the keyboard easy and safe.

Product Features
  • Groove Creator with Intro, Section change, and Musical Climax for real-time DJ-like control of your EDM tracks
  • Quick Sampling to USB or internal memory for instant recall
  • Assignable knobs allow real-time manipulation of effects and parameters on Voices, Styles, and more
  • USB-to-host connectivity with MIDI and audio transfer for easy, 1-cable connection to your music-making software
  • 1/4" Aux Line output jacks for connecting to an external amplifier/PA system without disabling built-in speakers
  • 1/8" Aux input takes output from a portable music player, iOS device, or computer and plays back audio through the instrument's speakers
  • Style Expansion Memory onboard storage lets you expand your Style library with custom content
  • USB-to-device port allows connection of USB flash drives for loading and storing data
  • XG Lite Voice library gives you a collection of Voices over General MIDI (GM) for playing back songs from Yamaha's extensive online XG song library
  • 48-note polyphony allows more notes to be played without drop-outs, making more complex musical passages possible
  • Weighs only 18.52 pounds — perfect for music making on-the-go
  • Includes Music Rest, and PA300C power supply
  • Compatible with optional Yamaha KS-SW100 subwoofer
Product Specifications
  • Number of Keys: 76
  • Type of Keys: Touch Response
  • Other Controllers: Pitchbend
  • Polyphony: 48 Notes
  • Presets: 237 Panel Voices, 24 Drum/SFX kits, 40 Arpeggio, 35 grooves, 457 XGlite voices
  • Memory: 1.73 MB
  • Storage: USB flash drive
  • Formats: WAV, SMF
  • Number of Effects: 59
  • Effects Types: DSP, Reverb, Chorus, Master EQ, Harmony
  • Audio Recording: WAV (44.1kHz, 16 bit, stereo)
  • Audio Playback: WAV (44.1kHz, 16 bit, stereo)
  • Audio Inputs: 1 x 1/8" (aux)
  • Audio Outputs: 2 x 1/4" (R, L/L+R)
  • USB: 1 x Type A, 1 x Type B
  • MIDI I/O: USB
  • Headphones: 1 x 1/4"
  • Pedal Inputs: 1 x 1/4" (sustain)
  • Built-in Speakers: 2 x 4.7", 12W per side
  • Power Supply: 16V DC power supply (included) / 6 x D batteries
  • Height: 5.43"
  • Width: 46.42"
  • Depth: 16.26"
  • Weight: 18.52 lbs.
  • Manufacturer Part Number: PSR-EW410
  • Warranty: 1 year limited warranty
What's in the Box
  • 1x keyboard
  • 1x keyboard bag
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The stats we're presenting here are based purely on our staff, who make up a tiny percentage of the general population, but they tell us that 100% of our staff that ordered something online exhibited signs of excitement when that thing was delivered.

We know the saying "Money can't buy happiness", but you don't often see someone crying on a jetski - and not just because all that water splashing around would make it hard to identify the tears in the first place.

Although we do have to ask: if our savings are this good, shouldn't we be calling it discount therapy instead?