Yamaha are on a tear. In recent months, they have announced major additions to their digital piano product lines:
- DGX-670 Portable Grand Piano
- Clavinova CLP models
- Clavanova CVP-900 series digital pianos
- New P-series models P-S500, P-143/145 and P-223/225
- Piaggero NP-15 and NP-35 portable keyboards
That is an impressive list of new product announcements. Clearly, Yamaha’s engineering and manufacturing teams were quite busy during the pandemic and global slow-down.
Yamaha have not yet updated all of its regional Web sites. If you can’t find the new Piaggero models on the USA site, check the European site.
Yesterday, Yamaha announced the second generation CSP series 200 digital pianos! I’m awaiting a P-515 successor — shouldn’t be long now that Yamaha have updated virtually every other digital piano offering.
Yamaha are reinventing the home digital piano. Yeah, every manufacturer offers a range of models from value-oriented entry pianos to mid-life crisis parlor toys. 🙂 The Yamaha CSP series are an interesting take on home players. The CSP front panel has exactly one button — the ubiquitous Yamaha FUNCTION button. The button is a minimalist’s gateway to the internal functions within, if you want them.
By minimizing front panel controls, customers aren’t confronted by a panel full of buttons, lights, knobs, sliders and other off-putting (and confusing) gizmos. A player can walk up to a CSP, turn it on and play a decent digital representation of an acoustic piano, both touch and sound. CSPs aren’t stripped down and have all the good stuff like CFX, Bösendorfer Imperial, Virtual Resonance Modeling (VRM) and GrandTouch.
A CSP piano really comes alive through the Smart Pianist app. In fact, the Smart Pianist app is required in order to make the most of the CSP’s capabilities. The CSP is designed for people who want to learn piano and have fun doing it. A matrix of LEDs above the keys create a waterfall display showing when and where to strike the keys. Smart Pianist knows the score [pun] and controls all of this. When the player is ready for reading, Smart Pianist displays the score. Thanks to Chord Tracker and other software smarts, Smart Pianist can generate a score from audio. Thus, Smart Pianist and CSP gamify the experience of learning piano.
Play-along is an important aspect of the CSP approach. I don’t know about you, but I have the most fun playing along with other people, a backing track or creating my own backing through auto-accompaniment. Yes, the CSP has auto-accompaniment with a zillion styles.
The new CSP models are CSP-295GP, CSP-295, CSP-275 and CSP-255. Judging from the initial pricing, I expect these models to replace the CSP-150 and CSP-170.
I read through the data list PDF. The new CSPs have more voices and styles than the Yamaha DGX-670. In terms of voices, drum kits, styles and chord recognition, you have all the main elements of a Yamaha mid-level arranger (PSR-SX700 and PSR-SX900). In this respect, the new CSP models are a terrific value and, frankly, I’m jealous! I doubt if the forthcoming P-515 successor will have such outstanding non-piano voices.
If you own an arranger keyboard, you’re already set although you probably don’t have Bösendorfer, GrandTouch, VRM, streaming LED lights or Smart Pianist. You might think that the CSP is lacking for style control buttons and such, but please consider this notion — Yamaha are evolving the CSP and other digital pianos to be “adaptive instruments.” An adaptive instrument follows chords across the entire keyboard (i.e., AI Full Keyboard fingering) and changes style sections depending upon your playing strength and the number of notes you play (i.e., Adaptive Styles). Brilliant! The instrument should and can follow the player instead of the other way around. Who needs buttons?
The Yamaha P-S500 has many features in common with the CSP series including the streaming light note display. The P-S500 puts it all into a quasi-portable form factor. I would jump at the P-S500 except for its Graded Hammer Standard (GHS) keyboard. After playing P-515 (NWX action), I just can’t return to GHS. I need to switch to a for-real Petrof acoustic grand at church and I don’t want to compromise. [Stubborn me!]
I’ve collected links to my remarks about CSP Gen 1, DGX-670, etc.:
- Yamaha P-145 and P-225 digital pianos
- Yamaha P-515 test drive (mini review)
- Yamaha DGX-670 test drive
- Yamaha CK88 test drive
- Yamaha CSP pianos first take
- Yamaha P-S500 digital piano
- Yamaha Piaggero NP-15 and NP-35
Thanks for reading!
Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski