Casio Electronic Keyboard PX330ES1A User Manual

ES  
USER’S GUIDE  
GUÍA DEL USUARIO  
Please keep all information for future reference.  
Guarde toda documentación para futuras consultas.  
Safety Precautions  
Before trying to use the piano, be sure to read  
the separate “Safety Precautions”.  
Precauciones de seguridad  
Antes de intentar usar el piano, asegúrese de  
leer las “Precauciones de seguridad” separadas.  
PX330ES1A  
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Contents  
General Guide...........................E-2  
Recording Your  
Installing the Music Stand........................................... E-3  
Saving Settings and Using Panel Lock....................... E-4  
Keyboard Play ........................E-34  
Recording or Playing Back a Single Song ................E-34  
Recording or Playing Back Multiple Songs ...............E-35  
Recording to a Specific Track (Part) .........................E-35  
Deleting Recorder Data.............................................E-37  
Returning the Digital Piano to Its  
Factory Default Settings ............................................. E-4  
Power Outlet .............................E-5  
Re-recording Part of a Recorder Song  
(Punch-in Recording) ................................................E-37  
Using an AC Adaptor.................................................. E-5  
Connections..............................E-6  
Other Settings.........................E-40  
Connecting Headphones ............................................ E-6  
Connecting a Pedal .................................................... E-6  
Connecting Audio Equipment or an Amplifier............. E-7  
Bundled and Optional Accessories............................. E-8  
Configuring Settings..................................................E-40  
Using a Memory Card ............E-44  
Loading and Removing a Memory Card ...................E-45  
Formatting a Memory Card .......................................E-45  
Saving Digital Piano Data to a Memory Card............E-46  
Loading Data from a Memory Card...........................E-47  
Deleting Memory Card Data......................................E-47  
Renaming a Memory Card File .................................E-48  
Playing Back a Song from a Memory Card...............E-48  
Using Built-in Tones ................E-9  
Turning on the Digital Piano and  
Playing Something...................................................... E-9  
Selecting a Tone......................................................... E-9  
Layering Two Tones ................................................. E-10  
Splitting the Keyboard between Two Tones ............. E-11  
Using Octave Shift.................................................... E-12  
Adjusting the Brilliance of a Tone ............................. E-12  
Adding Reverb to the Tone....................................... E-13  
Adding the Chorus Effect to the Tone....................... E-13  
Using the Metronome ............................................... E-14  
Using the Pitch Bend Wheel..................................... E-15  
Playing a Duet .......................................................... E-15  
Saving Data to Digital Piano Memory  
(Internal Area) Instead of a Memory Card.................E-49  
Error Messages.........................................................E-50  
Connecting to a Computer ....E-51  
Minimum Computer System Requirements ..............E-51  
Connecting the Digital Piano to Your Computer .......E-51  
Using MIDI ................................................................E-52  
Transferring Data between the Digital Piano  
and a Computer ........................................................E-52  
Using Auto  
Accompaniment .....................E-17  
Reference................................E-56  
Playing an Auto Accompaniment.............................. E-17  
Using One-Touch Presets ........................................ E-20  
Using Auto Harmonize.............................................. E-20  
Creating Your Own Original Rhythms....................... E-21  
Troubleshooting ........................................................E-56  
Product Specifications...............................................E-57  
Operating Precautions ..............................................E-58  
Appendix...................................A-1  
Playing Demo Songs..............E-24  
Tone List .....................................................................A-1  
Drum Assignment List.................................................A-3  
Rhythm List .................................................................A-4  
Music Preset List.........................................................A-6  
Fingering Guide...........................................................A-8  
Chord Example List.....................................................A-9  
Playing Tone Demo Songs....................................... E-24  
Listening to Songs Loaded from an  
External Source ........................................................ E-25  
Music Presets .........................E-27  
Selecting a Music Preset .......................................... E-27  
Creating an Original User Preset.............................. E-28  
MIDI Implementation Chart  
Registering Tone and  
Rhythm Setups.......................E-32  
Saving Registration Data.......................................... E-33  
Recalling a Registration............................................ E-33  
Company and product names used in this  
manual may be registered trademarks of others.  
E-1  
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General Guide  
8
9
bl  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
bk  
bm bn bo bp  
bq  
do  
dn  
br  
bs  
bt  
cs ct dk dl  
ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr  
dm  
Back  
dp  
dq  
dr  
ds  
dt  
ek  
Left Side  
Bottom  
en  
el  
em  
E-2  
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General Guide  
This manual uses the numbers and names below to refer to buttons and controllers.  
VOLUME controller  
VIBES/CLAVI button  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
INTRO/REPEAT button  
ORGAN button  
NORMAL/FILL-IN, sREW button  
VARIATION/FILL-IN, dFF button  
SYNCHRO/ENDING, PAUSE button  
START/STOP, PLAY/STOP button  
ACCOMP ON/OFF, PART button  
METRONOME button  
STRINGS/SYNTH-PAD button  
BASS/GUITAR button  
VARIOUS/GM TONES button  
REVERB, REV TYPE, EXIT button  
CHORUS, CHOR TYPE, u button  
SPLIT, SPLIT POINT, i button  
RECORDER button  
CARD/INTERNAL, SAVE/LOAD,  
ENTER button  
TEMPO buttons  
STORE, USB DEVICE MODE button  
SD CARD SLOT  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
RHYTHM, USER SONGS button  
POPS/JAZZ, MUSIC PRESET button  
LATIN/WORLD, MUSIC PRESET button  
PITCH BEND wheel  
USB port  
BALLAD/PIANO RHYTHMS,  
RHYTHM EDITOR button  
MIDI OUT/IN terminals  
USER RHYTHMS, RHYTHM EDITOR button  
Display  
DAMPER, SOFT/SOSTENUTO PEDAL jacks  
DC 12V terminal  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
TONE, REGISTRATION button  
FUNCTION button  
LINE OUT R, L/MONO jacks  
LINE IN R, L/MONO jacks  
POWER button  
w/NO, q/YES buttons  
GRAND PIANO (MODERN) button  
GRAND PIANO (CLASSIC) button  
ELEC PIANO button  
PHONES jacks  
Pedal connector  
* Installing the Music Stand  
Insert the bottom of the music stand into the  
groove on the top of the Digital Piano’s  
console.  
E-3  
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General Guide  
Saving Settings and Using  
Panel Lock  
Your Digital Piano lets you save its current settings,  
and lock its buttons to protect against operation errors.  
For details, see “Setting Backup” (page E-43) and  
“Panel Lock” (page E-43).  
Returning the Digital Piano to  
Its Factory Default Settings  
Perform the following procedure when you want to  
return the Digital Piano’s stored data and settings to  
their initial factory defaults.  
1.  
2.  
Turn off the Digital Piano.  
While holding down both the  
(TONE) and  
  
(FUNCTION) buttons, press the  
  
  
(POWER) button.  
The Digital Piano will turn on and initialize its internal  
system. You will be able to use the Digital Piano in a  
short while.  
NOTE  
See “Turning on the Digital Piano and Playing  
Something” (page E-9) for information about  
turning digital power on and off.  
E-4  
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Power Outlet  
Your Digital Piano runs on standard household power.  
Be sure to turn off power whenever you are not using  
the Digital Piano.  
AC Plug Configurations  
Depending on the geographic area, your Digital Piano  
may come with a second AC plug. Use the AC plug  
that matches the configuration of the wall outlet in  
your area.  
The AC adaptor is shipped from the factory with one of  
the AC plugs shown below installed.  
Using an AC Adaptor  
Use only the AC adaptor (JEITA Standard, with unified  
polarity plug) that comes with this Digital Piano. Use of  
a different type of AC adaptor can cause malfunction.  
Specified AC Adaptor: AD-A12150LW  
Back  
AC adaptor AD-A12150LW  
To change the AC plug  
Perform the following steps when you need to change  
the AC plug that is installed on the AC adaptor.  
1.  
Slide the plug in the  
direction of the arrow in  
Figure 1, and remove it  
from the AC adaptor.  
DC 12V terminal  
Household power  
Figure 1  
2.  
Align the plug that  
Note the following important precautions to avoid  
damage to the power cord.  
matches the power outlet  
of your area with the AC  
adaptor rails. Slide it in  
place in the direction of  
the arrow shown in  
Figure 2.  
During Use  
Never pull on the cord with excessive force.  
Never repeatedly pull on the cord.  
Never twist the cord at the base of the plug or  
connector.  
The power cord should not be stretched tight while  
it is in use.  
Figure 2  
3.  
Press the part indicated  
by the arrow in Figure 3  
until the plug clicks  
During Movement  
Before moving the Digital Piano, be sure to unplug  
the AC adaptor from the power outlet.  
securely into place.  
Figure 3  
During Storage  
Loop and bundle the power cord, but never wind it  
around the AC adaptor.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Should the AC plug come off of  
the AC adaptor, slide it back on  
as shown in the illustration. Slide  
the AC plug along the rails on the  
AC adaptor as far as it will go,  
until it locks securely in place.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Never connect the AC adaptor (JEITA Standard,  
with unified polarity plug) that comes with this Digital  
Piano to any other device besides this piano. Doing  
so creates the risk of malfunction.  
• Make sure the Digital Piano is turned off before  
plugging in or unplugging the AC adaptor.  
• The AC adaptor will become warm to the touch after  
very long use. This is normal and does not indicate  
malfunction.  
E-5  
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Connections  
Back  
Connecting Headphones  
PEDAL jacks  
IMPORTANT!  
• Before connecting headphones, be sure to use the  
Digital Piano’s VOLUME controller to turn the  
volume down to a low level. After connecting, you  
can adjust the volume to the level you want.  
• The Digital Piano automatically adjusts sound output  
to optimize for headphones (when headphones are  
connected) or the built-in speakers (when  
SP-3  
headphones are not connected).  
NOTE  
Left Side  
You can connect a pedal to the SOFT/SOSTENUTO  
PEDAL jack and apply either a soft or sostenuto  
effect to the notes you play. For details, see “Soft/  
Sostenuto Pedal Jack Setting” (page E-43).  
PHONES jacks  
Commercially available  
headphones  
Pedal Functions  
Damper Pedal  
Pressing the damper pedal while playing will cause the  
notes you play to reverberate for a very long time.  
Whenever a piano tone is selected, pressing this  
pedal will activate the Digital Piano’s Acoustic  
Resonance effect, which causes notes to resonate in  
the same way they do when the damper pedal on an  
acoustic piano is pressed. For details, see “Acoustic  
Resonance” (page E-41).  
Mini plug  
Connect commercially available headphones to the  
PHONES jacks. Connecting headphones to either of  
the PHONES jacks cuts off output to the speakers,  
which means you can practice even late at night  
without bothering others. To protect your hearing,  
make sure that you do not set the volume level too high  
when using headphones.  
Soft Pedal  
Pressing this pedal suppresses notes played on the  
keyboard after the pedal was pressed, and makes them  
sound softer.  
Connecting a Pedal  
Sostenuto Pedal  
Only the notes that are played while this pedal are  
depressed are sustained until the pedal is released.  
The back of the Digital Piano has two pedal jacks, one  
for a damper pedal and one for a soft/sostenuto pedal.  
To connect to the pedal jack  
Depending on the type of operation you want the  
pedal (SP-3) to perform, connect the pedal’s cable  
either to the Digital Piano’s DAMPER PEDAL jack or  
SOFT/SOSTENUTO PEDAL jack. If you want to use  
both operations (jacks) at the same time, you need to  
purchase another optionally available pedal.  
E-6  
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Connections  
Pedal Connector  
Connecting Audio Equipment  
or an Amplifier  
You can connect audio equipment or a music amplifier  
to the Digital Piano and then play through external  
speakers for more powerful volume and better sound  
quality.  
You can connect the optionally available 3-Pedal Unit  
(SP-32) to the pedal connector on the bottom of the  
Digital Piano. You can then use the pedals for  
expression that is similar to that available on an  
acoustic piano.  
Bottom  
Pedal connector  
IMPORTANT!  
• The Digital Piano automatically adjusts sound output  
to optimize for headphone output (when headphones  
are connected) or built-in speaker output (when  
headphones are not connected). This also will cause  
a change in the output quality from the Digital  
Piano’s LINE OUT R and L/MONO jacks.  
NOTE  
• Whenever connecting a device to the Digital Piano,  
first use the VOLUME controller to set the volume to  
a low level. After connecting, you can adjust the  
volume to the level you want.  
• Whenever you connect any device to the Digital  
Piano, be sure to read the user documentation that  
comes with the device.  
The SP-32 Pedal Unit supports half-pedal operation  
(pressing the pedal part way). You can adjust the  
amount of the effect is applied when the damper  
pedal is pressed part way. For details, see “Half  
Pedal Effect” (page E-43).  
The optionally available CS-67P special stand is  
required in order to use the SP-32 Pedal Unit.  
Guitar amplifier  
Keyboard amplifier, etc.  
INPUT 1  
INPUT 2  
Standard plug  
Tape recorder,  
MIDI sound source, etc.  
Standard jack  
Audio amplifier AUX IN jack, etc.  
LEFT (White)  
RIGHT (Red)  
Pin plug  
E-7  
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Connections  
Playing Output from External Equipment  
through the Piano’s Speakers   
Bundled and Optional  
Accessories  
Use only accessories that are specified for use with this  
Digital Piano.  
Use commercially available cables to connect the  
external audio equipment to the piano’s LINE IN jacks  
as shown in Figure .  
LINE IN R jack input sounds through the piano’s right  
speaker, while LINE IN L/MONO jack input sounds  
through the left speaker. Connecting to the LINE IN  
L/MONO jack only causes the same output to be  
produced from both speakers. It is up to you to  
purchase connecting cables that are compatible with  
the equipment you are connecting.  
Use of unauthorized accessories creates the risk of fire,  
electric shock, and personal injury.  
NOTE  
You can get information about accessories that are  
sold separately for this product from the CASIO  
catalog available from your retailer, and from the  
CASIO website at the following URL.  
Connecting to Audio Equipment   
Use commercially available cables to connect the  
external audio equipment to the piano’s LINE OUT  
jacks as shown in Figure . LINE OUT R jack output is  
right channel sound, while LINE OUT L/MONO jack  
output is left channel sound. It is up to you to purchase  
connecting cables like the ones shown in the  
illustration for connection of audio equipment.  
Normally in this configuration you must set the audio  
equipment’s input selector to the setting that specifies  
the terminal (such as AUX IN) to which the piano is  
connected. Use the piano’s VOLUME controller to  
adjust the volume level.  
Connecting to a Musical Instrument  
Amplifier   
Use commercially available cables to connect the  
amplifier to the piano’s LINE OUT jacks as shown in  
Figure . LINE OUT R jack output is right channel  
sound, while LINE OUT L/MONO jack output is left  
channel sound. Connecting to the LINE OUT  
L/ MONO jack only outputs a mixture of both  
channels. It is up to you to purchase connecting cable  
like the one shown in the illustration for connection of  
the amplifier. Use the piano’s VOLUME controller to  
adjust the volume level.  
E-8  
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Using Built-in Tones  
8METRONOME  
blUSER SONGS  
btw, q  
ctCHORUS, u  
bsFUNCTION  
brTONE  
csREVERB dkSPLIT, i  
dlENTER  
7PART  
 Tone groups  
1VOLUME  
bkTEMPO  
Turning on the Digital Piano  
and Playing Something  
Selecting a Tone  
Your Digital Piano has 250 tones, divided into eight  
groups.  
For more information, see the “Tone List” (page  
A-1).  
The Digital Piano has built-in demonstration tunes  
that highlight the different characteristics of tones.  
For more information, see “Playing Tone Demo  
Songs” (page E-24).  
1.  
Press the  
(POWER) button.  
  
This turns on power.  
To turn off the Digital Piano, press the  
again.  
button  
  
Left Side  
1.  
Press the  
is lit.  
(TONE) button so its upper lamp  
  
Each press of the button toggles between the upper  
and lower lamps.  
Lit  
button  
  
2.  
After a short while, the display screen should  
appear as shown below, which indicates that  
the Digital Piano is ready to be played.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Continuing on to the next step while the  
REGISTRATION lamp is lit will perform a registration  
recall operation (page E-32), which will change the  
setup of the Digital Piano. Make sure that the TONE  
lamp is lit before you advance to the next step.  
2.  
Use the “Tone List” (page A-1) to look up the  
group and the number of the tone you want to  
select.  
3.  
4.  
Use the  
volume level.  
(VOLUME) controller to adjust the  
Play something on the keyboard.  
E-9  
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Using Built-in Tones  
3.  
Use the  
select the group you want.  
to  
(tone groups) buttons to  
2.  
Hold down the button of the group that  
contains the tone you want to select as the  
layered tone until “LAYER: ON” appears on  
the display as shown below for a few  
moments.  
   
Example: To select the ORGAN group  
This will layer the tones currently selected in the two  
groups.  
Lit  
4.  
Use the  
tone you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Example: To select “002 Jazz Organ”  
Tone number  
Tone name  
The button you held down in step 2 will light to  
indicate that it is selected.  
Example: When BASS/GUITAR group is selected  
Lit  
NOTE  
Pressing q and w at the same time will jump to  
tone 001 of the currently selected group. Holding  
down either button changes the tone number at high  
speed.  
3.  
4.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
tone you want in the group you selected in  
step 2.  
Example: When “006 Picked Bass” is selected  
See page E-40 for more information about scrolling.  
Layered tone number  
Layered tone name  
Layering Two Tones  
You can layer two different tones so they play at the  
same time when you press a keyboard key.  
The first tone you select is called the “main tone,”  
while the second tone is called the “layered tone.”  
1.  
Select the main tone.  
Example: To select MELLOW PIANO in the CLASSIC  
To unlayer the tones and return the keyboard  
to a single tone, press any one of the tone  
group buttons.  
group, press the  
(CLASSIC) button and  
  
then use the  
(w, q) buttons to select  
  
“002 Mellow Piano”.  
NOTE  
You can adjust the balance between the main tone  
and layered tone. For details, see “Layered Tone  
Volume (Layer Balance)” (page E-41).  
E-10  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Moving the Keyboard Split Point  
Splitting the Keyboard  
between Two Tones  
You can split the keyboard so the left side (lower  
range) plays one tone and the right side (upper range)  
plays a different tone.  
You can use the procedure below to specify the  
location on the keyboard where it splits between the  
left side and the right side. That location is called the  
“split point”.  
Left (Lower Range) side  
Right (Upper Range) side  
Example: To split the keyboard between the GM SLAP  
BASS 1 tone on the left (lower range) and the  
GRAND PIANO tone on the right (upper range).  
Left (Lower Range)  
Tone: GM SLAP BASS 1  
Right (Upper Range)  
Tone: GRAND PIANO  
Split point  
1.  
Hold down the  
split point setting screen appears on the  
display as shown below.  
(SPLIT) button until the  
  
1.  
2.  
Press the  
(SPLIT) button.  
  
This causes the SPLIT lamp to light, indicating that the  
keyboard is split between two tones.  
Lit  
Current split point key name  
Select the tone you want to assign to the left  
side (lower range) of the keyboard.  
2.  
3.  
Press the keyboard key where you want to  
specify as the leftmost key of the right (upper  
range) tone.  
Example: To select GM SLAP BASS 1 in the VARIOUS/  
GM TONES group, press the  
GM TONES) button and then use the (w,  
q) buttons to select “073 GM SlapBass1”.  
(VARIOUS/  
  
  
This specifies the split point.  
Press the  
(SPLIT) button.  
  
This exits the split point screen.  
Lit  
Left tone number  
Left tone name  
3.  
To unsplit the keyboard and return it to a  
single tone, press the  
(SPLIT) button.  
  
The SPLIT lamp will go out, indicating that the  
keyboard is no longer split.  
NOTE  
If the keyboard is set up with layered tones (page  
E-10) when you perform the above split operation,  
the layered tones will play on the right (upper  
range) side of the keyboard.  
E-11  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Using Octave Shift  
Adjusting the Brilliance of a  
Tone  
After you split the keyboard (page E-11), you may find  
out that the lower range notes on the left are too low or  
that the upper range notes on the right are too high.  
You can use octave shift to shift the octaves of the  
upper range and lower range upwards or downwards  
in octave units.  
1.  
Press the  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
The FUNCTION lamp will light and the function screen  
will appear on the display.  
1.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
(TONE) button.  
  
This displays the octave shift screen.  
Lit  
2.  
Use the  
the Tmpr/Effect screen.  
(i) and  
(u) buttons to select  
  
  
Currently selected range  
Shift amount  
2.  
Use the  
(PART) button to select the range  
3.  
4.  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
whose octave you want to change.  
Each press of  
below.  
This will display a screen for selecting settings in the  
Tmpr/Effect group.  
(PART) cycles through the ranges  
Use the  
(i) or  
(u) button to select  
  
  
U1 (Upper1): Main tone  
the brilliance screen shown below.  
U2 (Upper2): Layered tone  
L1 (Lower1): Left (lower range) tone  
3.  
4.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to shift the  
  
5.  
6.  
Use the  
(
w
,
q) buttons to adjust the  
  
octave of the currently selected range.  
You can shift the octave within the range of –2 to 0 to  
2.  
brilliance of the currently selected tone. You  
can adjust brilliance in the range of –3 to 0 to 3.  
w: Mellower and softer  
q: Brighter and harder  
Press the  
This exits the octave shift screen.  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
Press the  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
NOTE  
This will exit the brilliance screen and cause the  
FUNCTION lamp to go out.  
Octave shift also can be performed as described for  
“Octave Shift” (page E-41).  
NOTE  
See “Other Settings” (page E-40) for details about  
using the (FUNCTION) button.  
  
E-12  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Adding Reverb to the Tone  
Adding the Chorus Effect to  
the Tone  
1.  
Press the  
reverb on and off.  
(REVERB) button to toggle  
  
1.  
Press the  
(CHORUS) button to toggle  
  
Lit when on  
chorus (which adds depth to a tone) on and  
off.  
Lit when on  
Selecting the Reverb Type  
You can select from among the following four types of  
reverb.  
Selecting the Chorus Type  
You can select from among the following four chorus  
types.  
1: Room  
2: Hall  
3: Large Hall  
4: Stadium  
1: LightChorus  
2: Chorus  
3: Deep Chorus  
4: Flanger  
1.  
Hold down the  
reverb type selection screen shown below  
(REVERB) button until the  
  
1.  
Hold down the  
chorus type selection screen shown below  
(CHORUS) button until the  
  
appears on the display.  
appears on the display.  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
reverb type you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
chorus type you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Press the (REVERB) button to exit the  
reverb type screen.  
  
Press the (CHORUS) button to exit the  
chorus type screen.  
  
E-13  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Changing the Tempo Setting  
Using the Metronome  
There are two different methods you can use to change  
the tempo setting: by pressing q (faster) and w  
(slower) buttons or by tapping a beat with a button.  
1.  
Press the  
This will start the metronome.  
(METRONOME) button.  
To adjust the tempo using q and w  
buttons  
1.  
Use the  
adjust the tempo setting.  
(TEMPO w, q) buttons to  
  
Each press of a button increases or decreases the beats  
per minute value by one.  
Holding down either button changes the value at  
high speed.  
You can specify a tempo value in the range of 20 to  
255.  
Lights with the first beat  
of each measure  
Lights with each subsequent beat of  
each measure  
2.  
Press the  
stop the metronome.  
(METRONOME) button again to  
Changing the Beats Per Measure  
You can specify from two to six beats per measure for  
the metronome. After you do, a chime will sound at the  
beginning of each measure. Specifying 0 for this setting  
will sound a straight beat, without a chime. This setting  
lets you practice with a steady beat.  
Tempo value  
To adjust the tempo by tapping a beat  
While holding down the (FUNCTION)  
1.  
  
1.  
Hold down the  
until the number of beats per measure screen  
shown below appears on the display.  
(METRONOME) button  
button, tap the q  
(TEMPO) button four  
times in time with the beat you want to  
specify.  
  
The tempo setting will change in accordance with the  
timing of your tapping.  
After you use this method to specify the approximate  
tempo, you can then use the procedure under “To  
adjust the tempo using q and w buttons” to adjust  
the setting to a more exact value.  
Tap four times  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
beats per measure value you want.  
Press the (METRONOME) button to exit  
the number of beats per measure screen.  
E-14  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Adjusting the Metronome Volume  
Playing a Duet  
You can use the following procedure to adjust the  
volume level of the metronome, without affecting the  
volume of Digital Piano output.  
You can use the Duet Mode to split the Digital Piano’s  
keyboard in the center so two people can play a duet.  
This makes it possible to configure the keyboard so, for  
example, the teacher can play on the left and the  
student can follow along on the right. Or one person  
can play the left hand part on the left, while another  
plays the right hand part on the right.  
1.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
(METRONOME) button.  
This displays the metronome volume screen.  
Left keyboard  
Right keyboard  
C3  
C4  
C5  
C6  
C3  
C4  
C5  
C6  
(Middle C)  
(Middle C)  
Metronome volume  
Pedal Operation when Playing a Duet  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
metronome volume.  
(w, q) buttons to adjust the  
  
Optional SP-32 Pedal Unit  
Right side damper pedal  
(Half-pedal operation  
supported)  
Press the (FUNCTION) button.  
This will exit the metronome volume screen and cause  
the FUNCTION lamp to go out.  
  
Left keyboard  
damper pedal  
Left and right side damper pedal  
NOTE  
Optional SP-3 Pedal Unit  
To use the SP-3 Pedal Unit as the right keyboard  
You also can use the procedure under “Metronome  
Volume” (page E-41) to adjust the metronome  
volume.  
damper pedal, connect it to the  
terminal.  
(DAMPER PEDAL)  
  
Half-pedal operation is not supported in this case.  
Using the Pitch Bend Wheel  
To use the SP-3 Pedal Unit as the left keyboard (initial  
default setting) or right keyboard damper pedal  
You can use the pitch bend wheel to slide the pitch of  
notes smoothly upwards and downwards. This  
capability makes it possible to reproduce saxophone  
and electric guitar choking effects.  
(selectable), connect it to the  
(SOFT/SOSTENUTO  
  
PEDAL) terminal.  
For information about how to select left or right  
keyboard control with the SP-3 Pedal Unit, see  
“Soft/Sostenuto Pedal Jack Setting” (page E-43).  
Adding a Pitch Bend Effect  
1.  
While playing a note on the  
keyboard, rotate the pitch bend  
wheel on the left of the keyboard  
upwards or downwards.  
The amount the note bends depends on  
how much you rotate the pitch bend  
wheel.  
Do not have the pitch bend wheel  
rotated as you turn on the Digital Piano.  
NOTE  
You also can configure pitch bend wheel operation  
by specifying the amount of pitch change at  
maximum rotation in either direction. See “Pitch  
Bend Range” (page E-43) for more information.  
E-15  
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Using Built-in Tones  
Configuring the Digital Piano for Duet  
Play  
Changing the Octave of a Duet Mode  
Keyboard  
You can use the following procedure to change the  
octave of the left and right Duet Mode keyboards.  
1.  
2.  
3.  
Press the  
lower lamp is lit.  
(USER SONGS) button so its  
  
1.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
(SPLIT) button.  
  
This displays the Duet Mode on/off screen shown in  
step 2 under “Configuring the Digital Piano for Duet  
Play” (page E-16). If the Duet Mode is currently turned  
off, press the  
(q) button to turn it on.  
Lit  
  
To practice with songs stored on a memory card,  
2.  
Of the four C keys in the left keyboard, press  
the one that you want to have located at  
middle C.  
press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button so its lamp  
  
is lit in place of the  
(USER SONGS) button.  
  
While holding down the  
button, press the  
This causes the Duet Mode on/off screen to appear.  
The keyboard keys are disabled while this screen is  
displayed.  
(FUNCTION)  
This will sound the note assigned to C4 and change  
the octave of the left keyboard.  
Example: To change the configuration so the leftmost C  
  
(SPLIT) button.  
  
key is middle C as shown below.  
Leftmost C key (Pressed key)  
C4  
C5  
C6  
C7  
C3  
C4  
C5  
C6  
1 octave higher than initial setting  
Unchanged  
3.  
4.  
You can use the same procedure as step 2 to  
select one of the C keys in the right keyboard  
to shift its octave as well.  
Press the  
Mode.  
(q) button to turn on the Duet  
  
This will cause the  
(SPLIT) button lamp to flash.  
  
Press the  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
4.  
5.  
Press the  
  
This exits the Duet mode on/off screen and configures  
the Digital Piano’s keyboard for duet play.  
(FUNCTION) button.  
This exits the Duet Mode on/off screen and causes the  
(FUNCION) button lamp to go out.  
  
The left and right keyboards will be configured  
according to your settings.  
To turn off the Duet Mode, press the  
(SPLIT) button so the SPLIT lamp goes out.  
  
NOTE  
Turning off the Duet Mode will clear your octave  
shift settings and return the keyboard to its initial  
default settings.  
NOTE  
You also can use the procedure under “Duet Mode”  
(page E-41) to turn the Duet Mode on or off.  
E-16  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
5SYNCHRO/ENDING boBALLAD/PIANO RHYTHMS  
btw/NO, q/YES  
brTONE csEXIT dlENTER  
6START/STOP  
blRHYTHM  
bpUSER RHYTHMS  
 Accompaniment  
patterns  
 Rhythm groups  
7ACCOMP ON/OFF  
bkTEMPO  
 Instrument parts  
With Auto Accompaniment, simply select the  
accompaniment rhythm you want and the matching  
accompaniment (drums, guitar, etc.) will play  
automatically when you play a chord with your left  
hand. It’s like having your own personal backup group  
along with you wherever you go.  
3.  
4.  
Use the  
select the group you want.  
to  
(rhythm groups) buttons to  
   
Example: When the LATIN/WORLD group is selected  
This Digital Piano has 180 built-in Auto  
Accompaniment patterns, which are divided into three  
groups. You can edit built-in rhythms to create your  
own original rhythms (called “user rhythms”), which  
you can save in a fourth group. For more information,  
see the “Rhythm List” (page A-4).  
Lit  
Use the  
rhythm you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Example: When “005 Samba 2” is selected  
Playing an Auto  
Accompaniment  
1.  
Press the  
lamp is lit.  
(RHYTHM) button so its upper  
  
This enables Auto Accompaniment.  
Each press of the button toggles between the  
RHYTHM and USER SONGS lamps.  
Rhythm name  
Tempo  
Rhythm number  
Measure  
Lit  
5.  
Use the  
adjust the tempo setting.  
(TEMPO w, q) buttons to  
  
This is the same as metronome tempo adjustment  
(page E-14).  
To return the rhythm to its standard tempo setting,  
press the  
time.  
(TEMPO w, q) buttons at the same  
  
2.  
Use the “Rhythm List” (page A-4) to look up  
the group and the number of the rhythm you  
want to select.  
E-17  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
6.  
Press the  
its lamp is lit.  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) button so  
9.  
Play other chords with left hand as you play  
the melody with your right hand.  
This turns ACCOMP on, so all accompaniment parts  
sound.  
Turning ACCOMP off so the ACCOMP lamp is unlit  
causes only the percussion instrument parts to sound.  
You can use “CASIO Chord” or other simplified  
chord fingering modes to play chords. For details, see  
“Selecting a Chord Fingering Mode” in the following  
section.  
You can use the  
(NORMAL) and  
Each press of the  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) button  
(VARIATION) buttons to modify accompaniment  
patterns. For details, see “Modifying Auto  
Accompaniment Patterns” (page E-20).  
toggles ACCOMP on and off.  
Lit  
10. When you are finished, press the  
STOP) button again to stop Auto  
Accompaniment.  
(START/  
Pressing the  
instead of the  
ending pattern before stopping Auto  
Accompaniment play. For details about ending  
patterns, see “Modifying Auto Accompaniment  
Patterns” (page E-20).  
(SYNCHRO/ENDING) button  
7.  
Press the  
(SYNCHRO/ENDING) button.  
(START/STOP) button will play an  
This puts Auto Accompaniment into “synchro  
standby”. Playing a chord during synchro standby will  
cause Auto Accompaniment to start to play  
automatically.  
Pressing the  
Accompaniment is in synchro standby will enter  
intro standby. Pressing the (VARIATION) button  
(INTRO) button while Auto  
NOTE  
You can use the following procedure to adjust the  
volume level of the Auto Accompaniment, without  
affecting the volume of Digital Piano output. For  
details, see “Auto Accompaniment Volume” (page  
E-41).  
will enter variation standby. For details about intro  
and variation patterns, see “Modifying Auto  
Accompaniment Patterns” (page E-20).  
Flashing  
You can change the size of the chord keyboard by  
using the split feature to move the split point (page  
E-11). The keyboard keys to the left of the split point  
make up the chord keyboard.  
8.  
Play the chord you want on the chord  
keyboard (left keyboard keys).  
Auto Accompaniment will start playing when you play  
the chord.  
To start percussion part play without playing a  
chord, press the  
(START/STOP) button.  
Example: To play a C chord  
Chord keyboard  
Melody keyboard  
E-18  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
CASIO CHORD  
Selecting a Chord Fingering Mode  
With “CASIO Chord”, you can use simplified  
fingerings to play the four types of chords described  
below.  
You can select from among the following five chord  
fingering modes.  
1: Fingered 1  
2: Fingered 2  
3: Fingered 3  
4: CASIO Chord  
5: Full Range  
Chord keyboard  
Chord Type  
Example  
1.  
Hold down the (ACCOMP ON/OFF) button  
until the chord type selection screen appears  
on the display.  
Major Chords  
C (C Major)  
CC#DEb E  
F
F#GAbABb  
B
CC#DEb E  
F
Press one key, whose note  
corresponds to the chord  
name.  
Note name  
• To play C Major, press any  
C key in the chord  
keyboard. The octave of the  
note does not matter.  
Minor Chords  
Cm (C minor)  
CC#DEb E  
F
F#GAbABb  
B
CC#DEb E  
F
Press the chord keyboard key  
that corresponds to the major  
chord, while also pressing one  
other chord keyboard key to  
the right.  
Chord fingering mode  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
chord fingering mode you want.  
Seventh Chords  
C7 (C seventh)  
CC#DEb E  
F#GAbABb  
F
B
CC#DEb E  
F
Press the chord keyboard key  
that corresponds to the major  
chord, while also pressing  
two other chord keyboard  
keys to the right.  
Press the (ACCOMP ON/OFF) button.  
This exits the chord fingering screen.  
Fingered 1, 2, 3  
With these three chord fingering modes, you play  
chords on the chord keyboard using their normal  
chord fingerings. Some chord forms are abbreviated,  
and can be fingered with one or two keys.  
For information about the types of chords you can  
finger and their fingerings, see the “Fingering Guide”  
(page A-8).  
Minor Seventh Chords  
Press the chord keyboard key  
that corresponds to the major  
chord, while also pressing  
three other chord keyboard  
keys to the right.  
Cm7 (C minor seventh)  
CC#DEb E CC#DEb E  
F#GAbABb  
F
B
F
When pressing more than one chord keyboard key,  
makes no difference whether the additional keys are  
white or black.  
Chord keyboard  
FULL RANGE CHORD  
With this chord fingering mode, you can use the full  
range of the keyboard to play chords and the melody.  
For information about the types of chords you can  
finger and their fingerings, see the “Fingering Guide”  
(page A-8).  
Fingered 1: Play the component notes of the chord on the  
keyboard.  
Fingered 2: Unlike Fingered 1, 6th input is not possible with  
this mode.  
Fingered 3: Unlike Fingered 1, this mode allows input of  
fraction chords with the lowest keyboard note as  
the bass note.  
Melody keyboard  
Chord keyboard  
E-19  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
Modifying Auto Accompaniment Patterns  
Using One-Touch Presets  
One-Touch Preset gives you one-touch access to tone  
and tempo settings that go well with the currently  
selected Auto Accompaniment rhythm pattern.  
There are six different Auto Accompaniment patterns,  
shown below. You can switch between patterns during  
accompaniment play and even modify patterns. Use  
buttons  
through  
to select the pattern you want.  
1.  
Hold down the  
least two seconds.  
(RHYTHM) button for at  
  
This will configure tone, tempo, and other settings to  
match the currently selected rhythm pattern. At this  
time, Auto Accompaniment play also will go into  
synchro standby, which means that Auto  
Accompaniment will start to play automatically when  
you finger a chord.  
Intro *1  
Normal  
Variation  
Ending *4  
2.  
Play a chord on the keyboard.  
This will start Auto Accompaniment play.  
Normal fill-in *2  
Variation fill-in *3  
*1 Press at the beginning of a song.  
NOTE  
Accompaniment play proceeds with the normal  
One-Touch Presets are not supported for user  
rhythms (001 through 010 of the USER RHYTHMS  
group).  
pattern after the intro pattern is complete. Pressing  
the  
(VARIATION/FILL-IN) button before  
pressing this button will proceed with the variation  
pattern after the intro pattern is complete.  
*2 Press while a normal pattern is playing to insert a  
fill-in pattern.  
Using Auto Harmonize  
*3 Press while a variation pattern is playing to insert a  
fill-in variation pattern.  
*4 Press at the end of a song.  
Auto Harmonize lets you add harmony to melody  
notes you play with your right hand. You can select  
any one of 12 Auto Harmonize settings.  
This will play an ending pattern and then stop Auto  
Accompaniment.  
1.  
Press the  
(TONE) button so its lamp is lit.  
  
Lit  
2.  
Hold down the  
auto harmonize screen appears on the  
display.  
(TONE) button until the  
  
Type number  
Type name  
E-20  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Creating Your Own Original  
Rhythms  
You can use rhythm editing to modify a built-in Auto  
Accompaniment rhythm to create an original “user  
rhythm” of your own. You can select a part (drum,  
bass, etc.) of a normal, intro, or other pattern (page  
E-20) and turn it on or off, adjust its volume level, and  
perform other operations.  
Auto Harmonize type you want.  
Type  
Number  
Type Name  
Off  
Description  
00  
Turns off Auto Harmonize.  
Adds close (separated by two to  
four degrees) one-note harmony  
below the melody note.  
01  
Duet 1  
Adds open (separated by more  
than 4 to 6 degrees) 1-note  
harmony below the melody  
note.  
02  
Duet 2  
1.  
2.  
Select the number of the Auto  
Accompaniment rhythm you want to edit.  
03  
04  
05  
06  
Country  
Octave  
Adds country style harmony.  
At the same time, press the  
(BALLAD/  
  
Adds the note from the next  
lower octave.  
PIANO RHYTHMS) and  
RHYTHMS) buttons.  
(USER  
  
5th  
Adds the fifth degree note.  
This displays the rhythm editor screen.  
Adds 2-note open harmony, for  
a total of three notes.  
3-Way Open  
Adds 2-note close harmony, for  
a total of three notes.  
07  
08  
09  
10  
3-Way Close  
Strings  
Adds harmony that is optimal  
for strings.  
Adds 3-note open harmony, for  
a total of four notes.  
4-Way Open  
4-Way Close  
3.  
Use the accompaniment pattern buttons (  
Adds 3-note close harmony, for  
a total of four notes.  
through ) to select the pattern (normal,  
intro, ending, etc.) you want to edit.  
The button you press will light, indicating that the  
pattern is being edited.  
11  
12  
Block  
Adds block chord notes.  
Big Band  
Adds big band style harmony.  
Each press of  
(NORMAL/FILL-IN) toggles  
4.  
5.  
Press the  
This will exit the auto harmonize screen.  
(TONE) button.  
  
between NORMAL and FILL-IN, and each press of  
(VARIATION/FILL-IN) toggles between  
VARIATION and FILL-IN. The applicable button  
flashes while the fill-in pattern is selected.  
Example: When intro is selected  
While playing chords, play the melody on the  
keyboard.  
Harmony will be added to your melody notes based on  
the chords you play.  
E-21  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
4.  
Use the instrument part buttons ( through  
  
Shortcut  
Button  
Parameter Description  
Replaces the part  
Setting  
) to select the part (drums, bass etc.) you  
  
want to edit.  
(drum, bass, etc.)  
accompaniment  
data with that of  
the specified  
The name of the part you select will appear on the  
display. Rhythm patterns are made up of the eight parts  
shown below.  
Rhythm  
Select:  
Rhythm  
001 to 190:  
Rhythm  
  
  
number *2 *3  
rhythm number. *1  
ck  
cl  
cm  
cn  
co  
cp  
cq  
cr  
Switches the part  
tone (instrument)  
to that of the  
specified tone  
number.  
Tone  
Select:  
Tone  
001 to 250: Tone  
Numbers *2 *4  
Drums Percus-  
sion  
Bass  
Chord 1 Chord 2 Chord 3 Chord 4 Chord 5  
Parts  
OFF:  
Mutes the part.  
ON:  
Sounds the  
part.  
Button illumination does not change when you press  
Prt:  
Part on/  
off  
Toggles each part  
on or off.  
the instrument part buttons ( through ). Button  
  
  
illumination indicates whether there is  
accompaniment data corresponding to each part.  
Example: When bass is selected  
Vol:  
Volume  
level  
Controls the  
volume level of  
each part.  
000 to 127  
  
Controls whether  
the sound of the  
part can be heard  
Pan:  
Panning  
–64 to 0 to 63 *5  
(position) from the left side or  
right side.  
Instrument part name  
Controls the level  
Reverb:  
Reverb  
of the reverb effect  
(page E-13) applied  
to the part notes.  
000 to 127  
000 to 127  
5.  
Edit the selected part as desired.  
The table below describes the parameters you can edit.  
  
Use the  
(u) and  
(i) buttons to select a  
  
  
Controls the level  
of the chorus effect  
(page E-13) applied  
to the part notes.  
parameter, and the  
(w, q) buttons to change its  
  
Chorus:  
Chorus  
setting. You also can use shortcut buttons (see table  
below) to select parameters.  
Pressing the  
(w, q) buttons at the same time  
  
will return the currently selected parameter to its  
initial default setting.  
*1 Replacing part accompaniment data clears all edits to the  
currently selected accompaniment data made up to that  
point.  
Pressing the  
(START/STOP) button during an  
edit operation will sound the accompaniment pattern  
with the edits you have made up to that point.  
*2 Sequential numbers starting from 001, which is the first  
rhythm of the first group (POPS/JAZZ). See the “Tone  
List” (page A-1) and “Rhythm List” (page A-4) for  
information on the numbering system.  
Pressing the  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) button will  
sound only the instrument part you are editing.  
*3 In the case of the intro and ending, specifying a rhythm  
for one part (drum, bass, etc.) will cause the same rhythm  
to be specified automatically for all of the other parts of  
the pattern.  
Procedure continues on page E-23.  
*4 Only drum set sounds (tone numbers 237 through 250)  
can be selected for drum parts and percussion parts.  
Drum set sounds cannot be selected for the bass and the  
chord 1 through chord 5 parts.  
*5 A smaller value shifts leftward, while a larger value shifts  
rightward. A value of zero specifies center.  
E-22  
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Using Auto Accompaniment  
6.  
7.  
Repeat steps 3 through 5 to edit all of the  
accompaniment patterns and parts you want.  
10. Decide on the user rhythm number where you  
want to save the rhythm and a rhythm name.  
Use the  
(u) and  
(i) buttons to move the  
  
  
After editing is complete, adjust the tempo of  
the rhythm as desired.  
The tempo you set here becomes the initial default  
tempo of the rhythm.  
cursor to the user rhythm number and rhythm name  
character you want to change. Use the (w, q)  
  
buttons to select the number or character you want.  
The rhythm name characters you can select are  
shown below. To input a space, press both of the  
  
(w and q) buttons at the same time.  
8.  
Press the  
(EXIT) button.  
  
This causes a confirmation message to appear asking if  
you want to save your edits.  
9.  
Press the  
(YES) button.  
  
This displays a screen for specifying the user rhythm  
number and rhythm name.  
If you want to exit the editing operation without  
saving, press the  
(YES) button.  
(NO) button instead of the  
  
  
11. Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
This saves the data.  
If the rhythm number where you are saving the data  
already has data saved to it, a message (Replace?) will  
appear on the display to confirm whether you want  
to replace the existing data with the new data.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Saving user rhythm data to a user rhythm number  
that already has data will cause the existing data to  
be replaced by the new data.  
Rhythm name  
Destination user rhythm number  
NOTE  
If the size of the accompaniment pattern or  
instrument part data is too large to be edited, a  
memory full message (Memory Full) will appear on  
the display. If that happens, select a different  
accompaniment pattern or instrument part for  
editing.  
E-23  
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Playing Demo Songs  
blUSER SONGS  
6PLAY/STOP  
btw, q  
2REPEAT  
7PART  
Playing Tone Demo Songs  
Your Digital Piano comes with eight built-in demo  
tunes, which demonstrate the characteristics of each of  
the eight tone groups.  
No. Tone Group Name  
Tune Name  
Song number  
Current measure  
Song tempo  
GRAND PIANO  
01  
Original  
Song name  
MODERN  
GRAND PIANO  
CLASSIC  
Pressing a tone group button ( through ) while  
demo song playback is in progress will switch to the  
demo song of that group’s tone. Also, you can scroll  
  
  
02  
Arabesque 1  
03 ELEC PIANO  
04 VIBES/CLAVI  
05 ORGAN  
Original  
Original  
Original  
through songs manually with the  
buttons.  
(w, q)  
  
2.  
Press the  
(PLAY/STOP) button.  
STRINGS/  
06  
Nessun Dorma  
[Turandot]  
This stops demo song playback.  
Playback of the demo songs will continue in an endless  
SYNTH-PAD  
07 BASS/GUITAR  
Original  
loop until you press the  
stop it.  
(PLAY/STOP) button to  
08 VARIOUS/GM TONES Original  
NOTE  
1.  
While holding down the  
(PART) button,  
Only the operations described above can be  
performed while demo song playback is in progress.  
press the  
(PLAY/STOP) button.  
This will start sequential playback of the demo songs,  
starting from song 1.  
E-24  
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Playing Demo Songs  
4.  
Press the  
This starts playback of the song.  
Press the (FF) button to perform a fast forward  
operation or the  
(PLAY/STOP) button.  
Listening to Songs Loaded  
from an External Source  
(REW) button for rewind.  
You can import song data from an SD memory card or  
computer as a user song, and use it for Auto  
Accompaniment or for practice.  
Pressing and releasing either button moves one  
measure, while holding down a button scrolls at high  
speed.  
Pressing the  
(PAUSE) button pauses playback.  
Press again to resume song playback.  
1.  
Load the song data you want to listen to one  
of the Digital Piano’s user songs.  
See “Loading Data from a Memory Card” (page E-47)  
and “Connecting to a Computer” (page E-51) for  
details about how to load data.  
Lights with each subsequent beat of each measure  
Lights with the first beat of each measure  
2
3
4
5
6
You also could play back data directly from a  
memory card without loading it into Digital Piano  
memory. For details, see “Playing Back a Song from a  
Memory Card” (page E-48).  
Rewind  
Pause  
2.  
Press the  
lamp is lit.  
(USER SONGS) button so its  
  
Fast forward  
Each press of the button toggles between the upper  
and lower lamps.  
5.  
Press the  
This stops song playback.  
(PLAY/STOP) button again.  
Song playback also will stop automatically when the  
end of the song is reached. To configure the Digital  
Piano to loop song playback without stopping, turn  
on “Song Repeat” (page E-42).  
Lit  
Changing the Song Tempo  
You can change the song tempo using the same  
procedure that you use to adjust the metronome  
tempo. For more information, see “Changing the  
Tempo Setting” (page E-14).  
3.  
Use the  
user song you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Example: When user song 003 is selected  
Playing on the Keyboard Using the Same  
Tone as the Song  
1.  
Hold down the  
at least two seconds.  
(USER SONGS) button for  
  
User song number  
Song name  
This will assign the same tone as the right hand part of  
the current song to the keyboard.  
NOTE  
You can use the procedure under “Practicing Either  
Hand’s Part (Part Off)” (page E-26) to turn off the  
left hand part and play along on the keyboard using  
the left hand part tone.  
E-25  
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Playing Demo Songs  
Adjusting the Song Volume  
Repeating Playback of a Specific Section  
(Repeat)  
You can use the following procedure to adjust the  
volume level of the song’s Auto Accompaniment,  
without affecting the volume of keyboard tone output.  
For details, see “Song Volume” (page E-41).  
You can configure the Digital Piano to repeat the  
section of a song you want to practice. You could, for  
example, specify repeat play from measure 5 to  
measure 8.  
Start  
End  
Practicing Either Hand’s Part (Part Off)  
You can turn off the right hand part*1 or left hand  
part*2 of a song and play that part on the Digital Piano  
while the song plays back.  
These measures are repeated.  
*1 Song data Channel 4 (fixed)  
*2 Song data Channel 3 (fixed)  
1.  
2.  
Press the  
This starts playback of the song.  
(PLAY/STOP) button.  
1.  
2.  
Press the  
(PART) button.  
This causes “L-[ON] R-[ON]” to appear on the display.  
When playback reaches the first measure of  
the section you want to repeat, press the  
(REPEAT) button.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to turn off the  
  
part you want.  
Press (w) to toggle the left hand part or (q) to toggle  
This makes the measure the “start measure”.  
the right hand part on and off.  
The  
(REPEAT) button lamp flashes at this time.  
3.  
4.  
Press the  
This exits the part on/off screen.  
(PART) button again.  
3.  
4.  
When playback reaches the last measure of  
the section you want to repeat, press the  
(REPEAT) button again.  
Hold down the  
at least two seconds.  
This will assign the same tone as the hand that is turned  
off to the keyboard.  
(USER SONGS) button for  
  
This makes the measure the “end measure”.  
Repeat playback of the specified section starts as soon  
as you select the end measure.  
The  
(REPEAT) button lamp is lit (not flashing) at  
this time.  
5.  
Press the  
song playback.  
The part you turned off does not sound, so you can play  
it on the keyboard.  
(PLAY/STOP) button to start  
Pressing  
(REPEAT) again returns to  
normal play.  
This will cause the  
(REPEAT) button lamp to go out.  
Sounding a Count at the Beginning of a  
Song  
You can configure the Digital Piano to sound a count  
before playback of a song starts, which helps to get the  
timing right when you are playing along on the  
keyboard. For details, see “Pre-count” (page E-42).  
E-26  
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Music Presets  
6START/STOP  
btw/NO, q/YES ctu dlENTER  
csEXIT dki  
bmbnMUSIC PRESET  
 Music Preset groups  
 Tone groups  
4FF  
3REW  
Music Presets provide you with one-touch tone,  
rhythm, chord, and other settings that are optimized  
for specific musical genres and songs.  
In addition to built-in presets, you can create your own  
original Music Presets (user presets).  
3.  
Press the  
(START/STOP) button to start  
Auto Accompaniment with the chord  
progression of the Music Preset. Play the  
melody on the keyboard.  
The preset chord progression repeats until you stop it  
There are a total of 300 built-in Music Presets, which  
are divided into three groups (A, B, C). A fourth group  
(D) is provided for user presets.  
For more information, see the “Music Preset List”  
(page A-6).  
by pressing the  
(START/STOP) button again.  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) button so the  
Pressing the  
ACCOMP ON/OFF lamp is lit (not flashing) or unlit  
will turn off the chord progression of the Music  
Preset and play the normal Auto Accompaniment  
pattern.  
Each press of the  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) button  
cycles in the sequence shown below.  
Selecting a Music Preset  
Unlit  
Lit  
Flashing  
1.  
Press  
same time.  
and  
(MUSIC PRESET) at the  
  
  
This causes the  
(ACCOMP ON/OFF) lamp to flash  
and the Music Preset screen to appear.  
Music Preset  
chord progression  
Normal Auto Accompaniment  
You can use the following steps to change the rhythm  
after selecting a Music Preset.  
(1)Hold down the  
(RHYTHM) button until the  
  
displayed Music Preset number and name change to  
the rhythm number and name.  
Music Preset number  
Music Preset name  
(2)Use the (w, q) buttons to select the rhythm you  
  
want.  
2.  
Use buttons  
buttons) to select a group, and then use the  
to  
(Music Preset group  
   
(3)Hold down the  
(RHYTHM) button again until  
  
the rhythm number and name change back to the  
Music Preset number and name.  
To change the tone, use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the Music  
  
through  
(tone  
  
  
Preset you want.  
group) buttons to select the tone group and then use  
the (w, q) buttons to select a tone number.  
This will configure the Digital Piano with settings (tone,  
rhythm, etc.) of the selected Music Preset.  
The following are the settings that are included in a  
Music Preset.  
  
4.  
To exit a Music Preset, press  
(MUSIC PRESET) at the same time.  
and  
  
  
Tones (main, layer, lower split) (page E-9)  
Layer balance (page E-10)  
Octave shift (page E-12)  
Reverb (page E-13)  
Chorus (page E-13)  
Rhythm (page E-21)  
Tempo (page E-20)  
Auto Harmonize (page E-20)  
E-27  
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Music Presets  
4.  
Edit the Music Preset parameters.  
4-1.To edit the chord progression  
Creating an Original User  
Preset  
A Music Preset editor is provided to allow you to  
create your own original Music Presets (user presets).  
Up to 50 user presets can be stored in Music Preset  
Group D.  
Press the  
(w) down button to display  
  
“CHORD” and then press the  
(ENTER)  
  
button to advance to the chord progression  
editing screen.  
Next, perform the editing operation described  
under “To edit the chord progression” (page  
E-29). After you finish the editing operation,  
1.  
2.  
Select the Music Preset you want to edit in  
order to create your user preset.  
press the  
(EXIT) button to return to the  
  
screen for selecting the type of editing  
operation, above.  
Change the tone number, rhythm number,  
and other settings of the Music Preset as you  
want.  
4-2.To edit Auto Accompaniment parameters  
Press the  
(q) up button to display  
  
“Parameter” and then press the  
(ENTER)  
  
The settings you configure here will be saved as a  
user Music Preset. See step 2 under “Selecting a  
Music Preset” (page E-27) for the settings you can  
configure and save for a user Music Preset.  
button to advance to the Auto  
Accompaniment parameter editing screen.  
Next, perform the editing operation described  
under “To edit Auto Accompaniment  
parameters” (page E-31). After you finish the  
3.  
Press the  
(BALLAD/PIANO RHYTHMS)  
  
editing operation, press the  
(EXIT) button  
  
and  
(USER RHYTHMS) buttons at the  
  
to return to the screen for selecting the type of  
editing operation, above.  
same time.  
This displays a screen for selecting the type of editing  
operation you want to perform.  
5.  
6.  
After editing everything you want, press the  
(EXIT) button.  
  
This will display a message asking if you want to  
save the user preset.  
Press the  
(YES) button.  
  
This displays a screen for selecting the Music Preset  
number and name for storing the edited data.  
Editing operation type  
If you do not want to save the edited data, press the  
(NO) button in place of the  
(YES) button.  
  
  
Music Preset name  
Music Preset number for data storage  
7.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Music Preset number where you want to  
store the edited data.  
E-28  
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Music Presets  
8.  
Enter a name for the preset.  
To edit the chord progression  
On the editing operation selection screen  
Use the  
(u) and  
(i) buttons to move the cursor  
  
  
1.  
to the character you want to change and then use the  
(w, q) buttons to change the character. The  
following shows a table of available characters.  
To input a space, press both of the  
buttons at the same time.  
  
(page E-28), select “CHORD” and then press  
the (ENTER) button to display the chord  
  
(w and q)  
  
progression editing screen shown below.  
(2) Cursor  
(1) Step (timing and chord)  
(3) Resolution  
(1) Step (timing and chord)  
The timing of a chord progression is expressed as a  
series of three values separated by colons (such as  
001:1:00) indicating measure*1 (001), beat (1), and  
tick (00).*2 This series of three values is referred to  
collectively as a “step”.  
9.  
Press the  
This saves the data.  
If the preset number where you are saving the data  
already has data saved to it, a message (Replace?) will  
appear on the display to confirm whether you want  
to replace the existing data with the new data.  
(ENTER) button.  
  
The screen shot above shows the first two steps  
(001, 002) of the Music Preset. Use the (REW) and  
(FF) buttons to scroll and view other steps.  
*1 Up to 999 measures  
*2 There are 12 ticks per beat, as shown below.  
Chord progression  
Measure 1  
Beat 2 Beat 3  
Measure 2  
Beat 2  
Beat 1  
Beat 4  
Beat 1  
002:1:00  
Tick  
00 01 02  
09 10 11  
For the sample display  
above, the chord change  
from C to Bm occurs here.  
001:1:00  
(2) Cursor  
Specifies the step that is currently selected for  
editing.  
(3) Resolution  
Resolution is a unit used when editing step timing.  
The initial resolution is R1 (one measure), but you  
also can select R4 (1 beat = 4 quarter notes) when  
you want to specify chords for each beat. Use the  
instrument part buttons ( through ) to select  
  
  
one of the eight resolutions shown below.  
ck  
cl  
cm  
cn  
co  
cp  
cq  
cr  
R1  
R2  
R4  
R8  
R8T  
3
R16  
R16T  
3
R32T  
(1 measure)  
(2 beats)  
(1 beat)  
(1/2 beat)  
(1/3 beat)  
(1/4 beat)  
(1/6 beat)  
(1/8 beat)  
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Music Presets  
2.  
Use the  
(REW) and  
(FF) buttons to  
4.  
Repeat the above steps to edit all of the steps  
you want.  
move the cursor (2) on the chord progression  
editing screen to the step you want to select.  
You can playback the Music Preset you are currently  
editing by pressing the  
(START/STOP) button.  
The table below describes other Music Preset editing  
operations you can perform. Press the  
3.  
Change the content of the selected step as  
desired.  
  
(FUNCTION) button, use the  
(u) and  
(i)  
  
  
3-1.Select a chord fingering mode and use the  
chord keyboard (page E-19) to input chords.  
Fingering a chord causes the cursor (2) to  
move to the next step automatically.  
buttons to select the editing operation you want,  
perform the required operation, and then press the  
(ENTER) button to apply the edit and return to the  
chord progression editing screen.  
  
To exit the editing operation and discard all of your  
If you want to advance to the next step  
without changing the current chord, press  
edits, press the  
(EXIT) button.  
  
Editing  
the  
(PAUSE) button.  
Operation  
(Display)  
Description  
Operation  
If (3) Resolution is shorter than the time up  
to the next step, a new step (without chord)  
that is equal to the time of the resolution  
will be inserted temporarily into the Music  
Preset. Fingering a chord for the new step  
will cause the step to be registered as part  
of the Music Preset, and the cursor will  
advance to the next step.* You can use this  
operation to insert a new step between the  
current and following step.  
Initializes all steps.  
Initialization is useful  
when you want to create  
a totally new chord  
progression from  
scratch.  
Initialize  
(Initialize)  
1
Changes the pitch (key) Use the (w, q)  
  
Change Key  
(Change  
Key)  
of the chords in all of the buttons to select the  
2
3
steps in semitone units.  
amount of change  
you want (–5 to 6  
semitones).  
* Using the  
(REW) and  
(FF) buttons to  
move the cursor without inputting a chord  
will delete the temporarily inserted step.  
Copies all of the steps of Use the (w, q)  
  
Append  
another Music Preset to buttons to select the  
Music Preset  
(Append  
Chords)  
3-2.Use the  
(w, q) buttons to change the  
the end of the current  
Music Preset.  
numberof the  
Music Preset you  
want to add.  
  
step timing (measure:beat:tick).  
Each press of either button changing the  
timing in accordance with the resolution.  
The range of values you can specify for the  
step timing is limited by the steps before  
and after the current step.  
The timing of the first step (001:1:00) is  
fixed and cannot be changed. Also, the final  
step is always one measure, regardless of  
the resolution.  
Delete  
Deletes a specified  
number of measures  
from the current cursor  
step forward.  
Use the (w, q)  
buttons to select the  
measures.  
  
Measures  
(DELETE  
Measure)  
4
5
Insert  
Inserts a blank measure  
at the currently selected  
step.  
Measure  
(INSERT  
1Measure)  
* The Music Presets in groups B, C, and D are  
numbered sequentially, following the numbers in  
group A, which start with 001. For details about  
sequential numbers, see the “Music Preset List” on  
page A-6.  
5.  
After all editing operations are complete,  
press the (EXIT) button to return to the  
  
Last step  
editing operation selection screen (page  
E-28).  
3-3.To delete a step, press both of the  
(w and  
  
q) buttons at the same time.  
You cannot delete the first step or the last  
NOTE  
A single preset can contain up to approximately  
2,000 chords. If your edits cause the chord limit to be  
exceeded, the message “Memory Full” will appear  
on the display and further editing will become  
impossible.  
step.  
E-30  
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Music Presets  
To edit Auto Accompaniment parameters  
1.  
On the editing operation selection screen (page E-28), select “Parameter” and then press the  
(ENTER) button to display the Auto Accompaniment parameter editing screen shown below.  
  
Setting  
Parameter  
2.  
Use the  
setting.  
(u) and  
(i) buttons to select a parameter, and the (w, q) buttons to change its  
  
  
  
Parameter  
Description  
Setting  
0 Off: Off (no standby)  
SYNCHRO TYPE:  
Synchro type  
Selects the synchro standby status and type  
when the Music Preset is selected.  
1 Normal: From standby to normal pattern  
2 Variation: From standby to variation pattern  
3 Intro: From standby to intro pattern  
1
DRUM ON/OFF:  
Drum on/off  
OFF: Mutes the part.  
ON: Sounds the part.  
2
3
4
Toggles the drum part (page E-22) on or off.  
PERC ON/OFF:  
Percussion on/off  
Toggles the percussion part (page E-22) on or OFF: Mutes the part.  
off.  
ON: Sounds the part.  
BASS ON/OFF:  
Bass on/off  
OFF: Mutes the part.  
ON: Sounds the part.  
Toggles the bass part (page E-22) on or off.  
CHORD1 - 5  
5 - 9 ON/OFF:  
Toggles the Chord 1 through 5 parts (page  
E-22) on or off.  
OFF: Mutes the parts.  
ON: Sounds the parts.  
Chord 1 - 5 on/off  
INTRO CHORD:  
Intro chord  
Selects from among major (× 12 keys) and  
minor (× 12 keys) for the intro chords.  
C - B: Major (C to B)  
Cm - Bm: Minor (Cm to Bm)  
10  
11  
ENDING CHORD:  
Ending chord  
Selects from among major (× 12 keys) and  
minor (× 12 keys) for the ending chords.  
C - B: Major (C to B)  
Cm - Bm: Minor (Cm to Bm)  
Specifies whether or not a fill-in should be  
inserted into the final measure of a chord  
progression.  
AUTO FILL-IN:  
Auto fill in on/off  
OFF: Fill-in not inserted  
ON: Fill in inserted  
12  
1 Normal: Edited chord progression proceeds  
as-is.  
• This parameter lets you add different  
variations to the timing of the chord  
progression being edited. You can use it to  
2 Half: Halves chord timing within a measure.  
3 Double: Doubles chord timing within a  
measure.  
TIMING SET:  
13 Chord progression  
variation  
match the chord progression to the beat of a 4 3/4: Multiplies chord timing within a measure  
specific rhythm.  
• A chord (step) that is outside of the rhythm’s  
beat is cut off.  
by 3/4. Select this setting to match to a  
6/8 time rhythm.  
5 6/4: Multiplies chord timing within a measure  
by 3/2. Select this setting to match to a  
6/4 time rhythm.  
3.  
After all editing operations are complete, press the  
selection screen (page E-28).  
(EXIT) button to return to the editing operation  
  
E-31  
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Registering Tone and Rhythm Setups  
btw, q  
brREGISTRATION  
 Tone and accompaniment areas  
dmSTORE  
 Tone areas  
Registrations let you save Digital Piano setups (tone,  
Registration Data Types  
rhythm, tempo, etc.) and for quick and easy recall  
when you need them.  
Tone Settings  
Tone numbers (main, layer, lower split)  
Layer on/off  
Layer balance  
Split on/off  
Split point  
Octave shift  
Brightness  
Reverb  
Registrations are stored using eight banks of 12 areas  
each as shown in the illustration below, for a total of 96  
setups. Areas A through D on the left (tone and  
accompaniment area) is for storing tones and Auto  
Accompaniment settings, while areas 1 through 8 (tone  
areas) are for storing tone settings only.  
Chorus  
Transpose  
Tone and  
accompaniment area  
Tone area  
Touch response  
Soft/sostenuto pedal setting  
Damper pedal adjustment  
Pitch bend range  
A
B
C
D
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Auto Accompaniment Settings (Areas A through D  
only)  
Rhythm number  
Accomp on/off  
Chord fingering mode  
Synchro standby  
Banks  
Bank 7, Area B data  
Bank 3, Area 2 data  
Tempo  
Auto Accompaniment volume  
Auto harmonize  
Tone Settings  
Keyboard Tone:  
003 Harpsichord  
Brightness: 2  
Reverb: 1 Room  
Chorus: Off  
·
Tone Settings  
Keyboard Tone:  
002 Electric Piano2  
Brightness: –1  
Reverb: 4 Stadium  
Chorus: 1 LightChorus  
·
·
·
Auto Accompaniment  
Settings  
Rhythm: 005 Pop Rock  
Tempo: 180  
Accompaniment Volume:  
098  
·
·
E-32  
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Registering Tone and Rhythm Setups  
Saving Registration Data  
Recalling a Registration  
1.  
Configure the Digital Piano with the tone,  
rhythm, and other settings you want to save.  
1.  
Press the  
lower lamp is lit.  
(REGISTRATION) button so its  
  
This enters the registration recall mode.  
2.  
While holding down the  
(STORE) button,  
  
use the (w, q) buttons to select the bank  
  
where you want to save the registration.  
Example: Bank 4  
Lit  
3.  
Next, hold down the  
(STORE) button  
  
again as you use the rhythm group buttons  
through ) or instrument part buttons (  
  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
(
bank where the registration you want to recall  
is located.  
  
  
through ) to select an area.  
  
The data will be saved to the bank and area you specify.  
Use the rhythm group buttons ( through  
or instrument part buttons ( through ) to  
)
  
  
Tone and  
accompaniment area  
  
  
specify the area.  
     
This will configure the Digital Piano with the  
registration data located at the bank and area you  
specified.  
Example: When recalling the registration data in Bank  
4, Area C  
Tone area  
         
  
Example: Bank 4, Area C  
Area  
E-33  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
6START/STOP  
9RECORDER  
btw/NO, q/YES  
bsFUNCTION  
dki  
ctu  
You can record your music as you play and store up to  
five songs in Digital Piano memory for later playback.  
You can divide a song into parts (by instrument, by left  
hand and right hand, etc.) and record each part  
separately. You can even use “punch-in recordingto  
edit specific parts of existing recordings.  
4.  
When you are finished, press the  
STOP) button.  
(START/  
This will cause the  
(RECORDER) lamp to flash and  
then light, indicating the playback mode.  
If you are using Auto Accompaniment, you also can  
end the recording session by pressing the  
(ENDING) button.  
Lit: Playback mode  
Recording or Playing Back a  
Single Song  
The following are the steps for recording or playing  
back a single recorder memory song.  
5.  
6.  
To play back what you have recorded, press  
(START/STOP) again.  
1.  
Press the  
its lamp is flashing.  
(RECORDER) button twice so  
Each press of  
starts and stops playback.  
This turns on the recorder and enters record mode.  
To turn off the recorder, press the  
Each press of the  
(RECORDER) button cycles  
(RECORDER) button so its lamp goes out.  
through modes as shown below.  
Unlit: Recorder off  
Recorder Off  
Unlit  
Recorder On  
Flashing: Record mode  
Lit: Playback mode  
NOTE  
Recorder memory capacity is approximately 10,000  
notes per song. When remaining capacity is 100  
notes or less, the  
(RECORDER) button lamp will  
2.  
3.  
Configure the tone, rhythm, and other  
settings you want to use.  
The settings you configure here will be included as  
part of the recorded song data.  
For details about what is included in the recorded  
song data, see “System Track” (page E-35).  
flash at high speed. Recording will stop  
automatically when memory becomes full.  
Repeat, fast reverse, fast forward, pause, and tempo  
adjustment during playback are the same as when  
playing back user songs. See “Listening to Songs  
Loaded from an External Source” (page E-25) for  
more information.  
Play something on the keyboard.  
You can listen to the song data currently stored in  
recorder memory at any time by pressing the  
Recording starts as soon as you play something.  
If Auto Accompaniment is playing, it will be  
included in the recorded data.  
(RECORDER) button to enter the playback mode  
and then pressing  
(START/STOP).  
E-34  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
IMPORTANT!  
Recording to a Specific Track  
(Part)  
• A new recording replaces (deletes) previously  
recorded contents.  
• If power to the Digital Piano is cut off while recording  
is in progress, everything you recorded up to that  
point will be deleted. Take care so power is not  
turned off accidentally during recording operations.  
You can record specific instruments, the left hand and  
right hand, or other parts of a song individually, and  
then combine them into a final song.  
What is a track?  
A “track” is a separate recorded part of a song. The  
recorder of this Digital Piano supports a total of 17  
tracks, which are divided between two types described  
below.  
Recording or Playing Back  
Multiple Songs  
You can record up to five songs (numbered 1 through  
5) in memory. After that, you can select a specific song  
for playback.  
System Track  
In addition to notes you play on the keyboard and  
other performance operation data, the system track  
also includes a wide range of setup information for  
the song, including layer on/off, split on/off, tempo,  
Auto Accompaniment settings, reverb on/off, etc.  
When you record a single-track song to recorder  
memory, as shown under “Recording or Playing  
Back a Single Song” (page E-34) and “Recording or  
Playing Back Multiple Songs” (page E-35),  
everything is recorded to the system track.  
1.  
Use the  
(RECORDER) button to cycle  
through the recorder modes until the  
playback mode is selected.  
Lit: Playback mode  
2.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
Tracks 01 through 16  
  
These tracks can be used to record notes, as well as  
pitch bend wheel and pedal operations, and the  
keyboard tone setting. These tracks can be combined  
with the system track and each other to create the  
final song.  
button, press the  
(RECORDER) button.  
This displays the song selection screen.  
3.  
4.  
5.  
Use the  
song number you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Press the (EXIT) button to exit the song  
selection screen.  
  
To record to the currently selected song,  
press the  
(RECORDER) button. To play  
back the currently selected song, press the  
(START/STOP) button.  
6.  
If you are recording, continue from step 2  
under “Recording or Playing Back a Single  
Song” (page E-34).  
E-35  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
Supported Track Data  
The following describes the data that can be recorded  
to each type of track.  
4.  
5.  
Select the tone of the part you want to record  
to the track.  
Press the  
(START/STOP) button.  
System Track, Tracks 01 through 16  
Keyboard notes, keyboard tone setting (main), pedal  
and pitch bend wheel operation  
This will start playback of what you recorded to the  
system track and start recording to the currently  
selected track. Play what you want to record to the  
current track along with the playback from the system  
track.  
System Track only  
Layer, split, octave shift, reverb, chorus, keyboard  
temperament, tempo, Auto Accompaniment play, auto  
harmonize, one-touch preset, Music Preset,*1  
registration*1*2  
6.  
To stop recording, press the  
STOP) button again.  
(START/  
This enters the playback mode. Press the  
(START/  
STOP) button again to play back the track you just  
*1 Recall only  
recorded. Each press of  
stops playback.  
(START/STOP) starts and  
*2 The Auto Accompaniment volume level and  
transpose setting of the recalled data is not included  
in the recording.  
You can use the following procedure to turn specific  
tracks on (play enabled) and off (play disabled). This  
allows you to listen only to the track(s) you want  
when recording a new track.  
1.  
Record the first part to the system track.  
(1) While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
Use the procedure under “Recording or Playing Back  
a Single Song” (page E-34) or “Recording or Playing  
Back Multiple Songs” (page E-35) to record to the  
system track.  
  
button, press the  
(RECORDER) button.  
This displays the song selection screen.  
(2) Press the (i) button once.  
  
This displays the track on/off screen.  
(3) Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the track  
2.  
Use the  
(RECORDER) button to cycle  
  
you want, and then press the  
to toggle it on or off.  
(ENTER) button  
  
through the recorder modes until the  
RECORDER lamp is flashing (record mode).  
Flashing: Record mode  
7.  
Repeat steps 2 through 6 as required to  
record all of the tracks you want.  
3.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
(RECORDER) button.  
This displays the track selection screen.  
Use the ) button to select the track you  
(
,
 w q  
want to record next (T01 through T16).  
After selecting a track, press the  
exit the track selection screen.  
(EXIT) button to  
  
Track Name  
Display  
System Track  
Sys  
Tracks 01 through 16  
T01 through T16  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
Deleting Recorder Data  
You can use the procedures below to delete an entire  
recorder song or to delete a specific track of a recorder  
song.  
Re-recording Part of a  
Recorder Song  
(Punch-in Recording)  
You can use punch-in recording to re-record a specific  
part of recorder song that you want to improve or  
correct.  
Deleting a Recorder Song  
Mistake  
1.  
Use the  
(RECORDER) button to cycle  
through the recorder modes until the  
RECORDER lamp is lit (playback mode).  
Lit: Playback mode  
Playback  
Use punch-in  
recording to re-record  
only this part.  
1.  
2.  
Turn on the recorder, enter the record mode,  
and select the track that contains the section  
you want to re-record.  
See step 3 under “Recording to a Specific Track  
(Part)” (page E-35).  
2.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
(RECORDER) button.  
This displays the recorder song selection screen.  
3.  
4.  
5.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
recorder song you want to delete.  
Hold down the  
(RECORDER) button until  
the punch-in recording screen appears on the  
display.  
Hold down the (RECORDER) button until  
the message “Sure?” appears on the display.  
Press the (YES) button to delete the  
  
recorder song.  
To cancel the delete operation, press the  
(NO)  
  
button.  
Deleting a Recorder Song Track  
3.  
4.  
Press the  
This will start playback of the selected track.  
(START/STOP) button.  
1.  
Perform steps 1 through 3 of the procedure  
under “Deleting a Recorder Song” to select  
the recorder song that contains the track you  
want to delete.  
When playback reaches the point you want to  
re-record, play the notes and perform the  
other operations you want.  
This automatically starts punch-in recording, which  
will continue until step 5, below.  
2.  
3.  
Press the  
This displays the track selection screen.  
(i) button.  
  
Any one of the following also will start punch-in  
recording: a pedal or pitch bend wheel operation;  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
pressing the  
(RECORDER) button;*1 changing the  
track you want to delete.  
tone setting; changing the rhythm, or tempo setting*2  
*1 Press (RECORDER) when you want to start  
4.  
5.  
Hold down the (RECORDER) button until  
the message “Sure?” appears on the display.  
punch-in recording without note input or a setting  
change.  
*2  
System track only  
You can perform  
(REW),  
(FF), and  
(PAUSE)  
Press the (YES) button to delete the track.  
To cancel the delete operation, press the  
button.  
  
button operations during punch-in playback to jump  
more quickly to the section you want to re-record.  
(NO)  
  
E-37  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
5.  
To stop punch-in recording, press the  
(START/STOP) button again.  
7.  
8.  
Press the  
playback.  
(START/STOP) button to start  
Anything in the track following the point where you  
Punch in recording will start from the start measure  
and stop with the end measure automatically.  
pressed the  
as-is.  
(START/STOP) button will be retained  
Play the notes and perform the other  
operations you want.  
If you want to delete all of the data in the track  
following the section you re-recorded with punch-in  
recording, press the (RECORDER) button in place  
of the  
(START/STOP) button above.  
If you want to cancel punch-in recording and retain  
the original (unedited) track data, hold down the  
(RECORDER) button until the display exits the  
punch-in recording screen.  
Specifying the Punch-in Recording  
Location (Auto Punch-in Recording)  
You can use the following procedure to specify a  
particular range for punch-in recording.  
Start measure  
End measure  
Punch-in recording range  
1.  
Turn on the recorder, enter the record mode,  
and display the recording setup screen.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION) button,  
  
press the  
(RECORDER) button.  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
“AutoPu.IN”, and then use the  
buttons to select the start measure.  
(
u
) and  
(i) buttons to display  
  
  
(
w
,
q
)
  
Use the (u) and (i) buttons to  
display “AutoPu.OUT”, and then use the  
  
  
  
(w, q) buttons to select the end measure.  
After selecting the start and end measures, press the  
(EXIT) button to exit the recording setup screen.  
  
4.  
Select the track that contains the range of  
measures you want to re-record.  
See step 3 under “Recording to a Specific Track  
(Part)” (page E-35).  
5.  
6.  
Hold down the  
the punch-in recording screen appears on the  
display.  
(RECORDER) button until  
Press the  
(q) button to turn on auto  
  
punch-in recording.  
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Recording Your Keyboard Play  
Performing Punch-in Recording for Areas  
Smaller than One Measure  
Use the procedure below to specify a punch-in  
recording area that includes a part of a measure.  
Example: To re-record from beat 3 of measure 2 up to beat  
1 of measure 4  
To re-record this section  
1.  
2.  
Start playback of the song that contains the  
section you want to re-record.  
When playback reaches the beginning of the  
section you want to re-record, press the  
(REPEAT) button.  
3.  
When playback reaches the end of the  
section you want to re-record, press the  
(REPEAT) button again.  
4.  
5.  
Press the  
playback.  
(START/STOP) button to stop  
Turn on the recorder and select the track that  
contains the section you want to re-record.  
For information about selecting a track, see step 3  
under “Recording to a Specific Track (Part)” (page  
E-35).  
6.  
Hold down the  
the punch-in recording screen appears on the  
display.  
(RECORDER) button until  
7.  
8.  
9.  
Press the  
punch-in recording.  
(q) button to turn on auto  
  
Press the  
repeat.  
(REPEAT) button to turn on  
Press the  
(START/STOP) button.  
This starts punch-in playback from the measure before  
the location (start point) you specified in step 2, above.  
Punch-in recording starts automatically when  
playback reaches the start point and ends  
automatically when it reaches the location you  
specified in step 3 (end point).  
E-39  
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Other Settings  
btw, q  
bsFUNCTION  
dki  
ctu  
You can use the settings in this section to adjust the  
tuning and touch of the keyboard, to configure pedal  
and MIDI settings, and to configure other parameters  
in order to tailor Digital Piano operation to your  
particular needs.  
NOTE  
Holding down the  
you press the  
scroll the setting in steps of 10.  
You also can use the (FUNCTION) button for  
(FUNCTION) button while  
(w, q) buttons in step 3 will  
  
  
  
faster scrolling while changing the tone number,  
rhythm number, and other scrollable settings.  
Configuring Settings  
Keep the  
while pressing a  
speed scrolling. Releasing the  
(FUNCTION) button depressed  
  
(w, q) button for high-  
  
1.  
Press the  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
(FUNCTION)  
  
The FUNCTION lamp will light and the function screen  
will appear on the display. (See table below.)  
button first can result in another unintended  
setting being changed.  
Parameter or group  
Setting  
2.  
Use the  
(u) and  
(i) buttons to select  
  
  
one of the parameters (1 through 8) shown in  
the table below.  
Parameters 4 through 8 actually are parameter  
groups. After selecting a group, press the  
  
(ENTER) button, and then use buttons (u) and  
  
  
(i) to select the parameter you want.  
Short cut buttons also are available for accessing a  
parameter directly after you press the  
  
(FUNCTION) button, without going through the  
menu. See the “Shortcut Button” column in the table  
below for the applicable shortcut button of each  
parameter.  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to change the  
  
setting of the currently selected parameter.  
To return to the function screen, press the  
(EXIT)  
  
or  
(FUNCTION) button.  
  
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Other Settings  
Display  
Name  
Shortcut  
Button*  
No.  
Parameter  
Description  
Settings  
1
Keyboard Key (Transpose) Transpose  
Adjusts keyboard tuning by semitone –12 to 00 to 12  
  
  
units.  
semitones  
2
3
Keyboard Fine Tuning  
(Tuning)  
Tune  
Adjusts keyboard tuning by cent  
(1 semitone = 100 cents) units.  
–99 to 00 to 99 cents  
Keyboard Touch (Touch  
Response)  
Touch  
Adjusts keyboard touch.  
Off: Off  
1: Strong sound even  
with light pressure  
2: Normal  
  
3: Normal sound even  
with strong pressure  
4
Volume Level Group  
Volume  
  
4-1 Layered Tone Volume LayerBal.  
(Layer Balance)  
Adjusts the volume level of the layered –24 to 00 to 24  
tone without changing the keyboard  
main tone.  
4-2 Auto Accompaniment AccompVol.  
Volume  
Adjusts the volume level of Auto  
Accompaniment without changing the  
keyboard tone volume level.  
00 to 42  
   
4-3 Song Volume  
SongVol.  
Adjusts the volume level of user song 00 to 42  
playback without changing the  
keyboard tone volume level.  
   
4-4 Metronome Volume  
MetroVol.  
See page E-15.  
00 to 42  
   
5
Temperament/Effect Group Tmpr/Effect  
  
5-1 Temperament  
Temper.  
Changes the temperament of the  
<Temperaments>  
keyboard and Auto Accompaniment  
00: Equal / 01: Pure Major /  
from the standard equal temperament 02: Pure Minor /  
to another tuning more suitable for  
playing classics, etc.  
03: Pythagorean /  
04: Kirnberger 3 /  
• Pressing a keyboard key while the  
temperament screen is displayed  
will make the pressed key the base  
note of the temperament.  
05: Werckmeister /  
06: Mean-Tone / 07: Rast /  
08: Bayati / 09: Hijaz /  
10: Saba / 11: Dashti /  
12: Chahargah /  
13: Segah / 14: Gurjari  
Todi / 15: Chandrakauns /  
16: Charukeshi  
<Base notes>  
C to B (12 types)  
5-2 Accompaniment  
Temperament  
AccompTmpr Turn this setting off to play Auto  
Accompaniment patterns using  
Off, On  
standard equal temperament (00:  
Equal), regardless of the temperament  
setting currently selected with the  
Temperament parameter (5-1).  
5-3 Stretch Tuning  
Stretch  
Sharpens high notes and flattens low  
notes to achieve stretch tuning. Turn  
off this setting to play with normal  
(non-stretch) tuning.  
Off, On  
5-4 Brilliance  
Brilliance  
See page E-12.  
–3 to 0 to 3  
Off, On  
5-5 Acoustic Resonance  
AcoResona.  
Reproduces the acoustic resonance  
that occurs when the damper pedal is  
depressed on a grand piano.  
No acoustic resonance is applied when  
this setting is turned off.  
5-6 Octave Shift  
5-7 Duet Mode  
OctShift  
Duet  
See page E-12.  
U1 : –2 to 0 to 2  
U2 : –2 to 0 to 2  
L1 : –2 to 0 to 2  
   
See page E-15.  
Off, On  
   
*
– in this column means, “While holding down , press .”  
     
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Other Settings  
Display  
Name  
Shortcut  
Button*  
No.  
Parameter  
Description  
Settings  
6
Song Playback/Card Group Play/CARD  
  
6-1 Pre-count  
PreCount  
Turn on this setting for an audible  
count before starting playback of a  
user song or a song on a memory card.  
Off, On  
Off, On  
6-2 Song Repeat  
6-3 Card Folder  
SongRepeat  
Turn on this setting to repeat play a  
user song or a song on a memory card.  
   
CARD Folder See page E-53.  
(Folder Name)  
   
to  
  
6-4 Formatting a Memory CARD  
See page E-45.  
   
Card  
FORMAT  
6-5 Card File Delete  
6-6 Card File Rename  
MIDI Group  
File DELETE  
See page E-47.  
File RENAME See page E-48.  
MIDI  
7
  
7-1 Keyboard Channel  
KeyboardCh  
Selects the keyboard channel, which is 01 to 16  
the channel used to send MIDI data  
corresponding to Digital Piano  
keyboard play to an external device.  
7-2 Accomp MIDI Out  
AccompOut  
Turn on this setting to send MIDI data Off, On  
corresponding to Auto  
Accompaniment to an external device.  
7-3 MIDI In Chord Judge ChordJudge  
Select whether chord input should be Off, On  
performed when an Auto  
Accompaniment chord keyboard MIDI  
note on message is received.  
7-4 Local Control  
LocalCtl.  
Turn off this setting to have keyboard Off, On  
notes sent to an external device  
without being sounded by the Digital  
Piano.  
*
– in this column means, “While holding down , press .”  
     
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Other Settings  
Display  
Name  
Shortcut  
Button*  
No.  
Parameter  
Description  
Settings  
8
Other Parameters Group  
8-1 Display Contrast  
General  
Contrast  
  
Adjusts the contrast of the Digital  
Piano’s display.  
00 to 16  
SFT : Soft pedal  
8-2 Soft/Sostenuto Pedal Ped.Assign  
Jack Setting  
Specifies whether the pedal unit  
connected to the SOFT/SOSTENUTO SOS : Sostenuto pedal  
jack is a soft pedal or a sostenuto  
pedal.  
• See page E-15 for details about the  
two pedal types.  
8-3 Half Pedal Effect  
8-4 Pitch Bend Range  
8-5 Panel Lock  
HalfPedal  
BendRange  
PanelLock  
Adjusts the amount of the pedal effect 00 to 42  
applied when the damper pedal is  
pressed part way.  
Specifies the amount of pitch bend  
applied when the pitch bend wheel is  
rotated all the way up or down.  
00 to 12 semitones  
Turn on to lock the Digital Piano’s  
control panel to prevent unauthorized  
or accidental operation.  
Off, On  
• This setting is disabled in the Duet  
Mode, while the recorder is on, or  
while Auto Accompaniment, a song,  
or the metronome is playing.  
8-6 Setting Backup  
BackUp  
Switching this setting from off to on  
will save various Digital Piano settings  
in effect at that time, and restore them  
the next time the Digital Piano is  
turned on.  
Off, On  
• This operation is disabled in the  
Duet Mode, while the recorder is on,  
or while Auto Accompaniment, a  
song, or the metronome is playing.  
*
in this column means, “While holding down , press .”  
     
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Using a Memory Card  
btw/NO, q/YES  
bsFUNCTION  
dlCARD/INTERNAL,  
6PLAY/STOP  
ENTER  
7PART  
 Folders  
ctu dki  
You can use the procedures in this section to transfer  
edited Auto Accompaniment data, recorder data, and  
other data from the Digital Piano to a commercially  
available SD memory card for storage. You also can use  
a memory card to transfer standard MIDI files (SMF),  
and accompaniment data you downloaded from the  
CASIO website from your computer to Digital Piano  
memory. Once you do, you can use them as user songs  
and user rhythms.  
Card and Card Slot Precautions  
IMPORTANT!  
• Be sure to observe the precautions provided in the  
documentation that comes with the memory card.  
• Memory cards have a write-protect switch. Use it  
when you want to protect the data on the card from  
accidental deletion.  
• Avoid using a memory card under the following  
conditions. Such conditions can corrupt data stored  
on the memory card.  
• Areas subjected to high temperature, high  
humidity, or corrosive gas  
• Areas subjected to strong electrostatic charge and  
digital noise  
• Never touch the contacts of a memory card when  
loading it or removing it from the Digital Piano.  
• Never eject the memory card while data is being  
written to or loaded from it. Doing so can corrupt the  
data on the memory card and damage the memory  
card slot.  
• Never insert anything besides a memory card into  
the card slot. Doing so creates the risk of  
malfunction.  
Use a memory card with a capacity of 2GB or less.  
Use of a card with a capacity that is greater than  
2GB or other types of memory cards is not  
supported.  
In this manual, mentions of a “memory card” refer  
to an SD memory card.  
Types of Data  
Supported  
Operations  
Description  
(File Name Extension)  
Load  
from  
Memory  
Card  
Data Type  
Save to  
Memory  
Card  
• Electrostatic charge from your fingers or the memory  
card to the card slot can cause malfunction of the  
Digital Piano. If this happens, turn the Digital Piano  
off and then back on again.  
A memory card can become quite warm after very  
long use in the memory card slot. This is normal and  
does not indicate malfunction.  
User  
rhythms  
(page E-21) Digital Piano (AC7)  
Auto Accompaniment  
data edited with this  
O
O
O
O
User songs One of the following two  
(page E-25) types of music data  
1. CASIO format data  
(CM2)  
2. Standard MIDI files  
(MID)  
SMF Format 0 or  
Format 1  
User Music Music Preset data edited  
Presets  
on this Digital Piano  
O
(page E-28) (MPS)  
Recorder  
songs  
(page E-34)  
Song data recorded on  
this Digital Piano (CSR)  
O*  
O
O
Registration Tone and rhythm setup  
(page E-32) settings (CR6)  
O
* Can be saved as a standard MIDI file (SMF format 0).  
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Using a Memory Card  
Loading and Removing a  
Memory Card  
Formatting a Memory Card  
IMPORTANT!  
• Format a memory card before using it for the first  
time.  
IMPORTANT!  
• A memory card must be positioned correctly when  
being loaded into the Digital Piano. Trying to force  
an improperly oriented memory card into the slot can  
damage the memory card and the slot.  
• Before formatting a memory card, make sure it does  
not have any valuable data stored on it.  
• The memory card format operation performed by this  
Digital Piano is a “quick format”. If you want to  
completely delete all of the data on the memory  
card, format it on your computer or some other  
device.  
1.  
With the top of the memory card facing  
upwards (so you can see it), carefully insert it  
into the Digital Piano’s memory card slot (  
until stops with a click.  
)
  
1.  
Insert the memory card you want to format  
into the Digital Piano’s memory card slot.  
Make sure the write-protect switch of the memory card  
is not in the write-protect position so writing is enabled.  
2.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
button.  
(CARD/INTERNAL)  
  
Top  
This displays the format screen.  
2.  
To remove the memory card first press it into  
the slot further.  
This will cause the memory card to disengage and eject  
partially. Pull the memory card the rest of the way out  
of the slot.  
3.  
4.  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
This will display a confirmation message (SURE?).  
If you want to cancel the format operation, press the  
(NO) or  
(EXIT) button.  
  
  
Press the  
(YES) button.  
  
The message “Please Wait” will remain on the  
display while the format operation is being  
performed. Do not perform any Digital Piano  
operation while this message is on the display.  
“Complete” appears on the display after formatting  
is complete.  
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Using a Memory Card  
5.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the file  
  
Saving Digital Piano Data to a  
Memory Card  
number (01 to 99) you want to assign to the  
data when it is saved to the memory card.  
The file number is the final two characters of the file  
name* that appears on the display. By changing this  
within the range of 01 to 99 for each save, up to 99  
files of the same data type can be stored on the  
memory card.  
* The first six characters of the file name indicate the  
data type as shown below. These characters are  
fixed and cannot be changed.  
Use the following procedure to save Digital Piano data  
to a memory card.  
Recorder songs can be saved as a standard MIDI file  
(SMF format 0).  
User songs (downloaded songs, etc.) cannot be  
saved to a memory card.  
1.  
2.  
Insert a memory card into the Digital Piano’s  
memory card slot.  
File Name  
Data Type  
(** = file number)  
USRRHY**  
USRMPS**  
User rhythms  
User Music Preset  
Recorder songs  
Registrations  
Select the data you want to save to the  
memory card.  
RECSNG**  
REGIST**  
To select this  
type of data:*1  
Do this:  
User rhythms Select from among user rhythms 001  
through 010 (page E-21).  
6.  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
User Music  
Preset  
Select from among user Music Preset  
001 through 050 (page E-28).  
The message “Please Wait” will remain on the  
display while the save operation is being performed.  
Do not perform any Digital Piano operation while  
this message is on the display. “Complete” appears  
on the display after data save is complete.  
If there already is a file with the same name on the  
memory card, a message (Replace?) will appear  
asking if you want to replace it with the new data.  
Recorder songs Select from among recorder songs 1  
through 5 (page E-34).  
Registrations*2 Press the  
(REGISTRATION) button  
  
so its lower lamp is lit.  
*1For more information about data types, see page  
Press the  
(YES) button to overwrite or the  
(NO)  
  
  
E-44.  
button to cancel the save operation.  
*2All registration data (8 banks × 12 areas) is saved  
Memory Card Data Storage  
in a single file.  
The above procedure stores Digital Piano data in a  
folder named MUSICDAT on the memory card.  
The MUSICDAT folder is created automatically  
when you format the memory card on the Digital  
Piano (page E-45).  
Note that files not in the MUSICDAT folder cannot  
be loaded, deleted, or renamed by this Digital Piano.  
You also will not be able to load or delete any file  
stored in any subfolder inside the MUSICDAT  
folder.  
3.  
4.  
Hold down the  
until the “LOAD” screen appears for the data  
you selected.  
You can cancel the LOAD/SAVE operation any time  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button  
  
by pressing the  
(EXIT) button.  
  
Press the  
(i) button to switch to the  
  
“SAVE” screen for the data you selected.  
If you are saving a recorder song to a standard MIDI  
file (SMF), press the  
(i) button again so “SMF” is  
  
displayed on the right side of the screen.  
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Using a Memory Card  
Loading Data from a Memory  
Card  
You can use the procedure below to load data from a  
memory card into Digital Piano memory.  
Deleting Memory Card Data  
Use the following procedure to delete memory card  
data (files).  
1.  
2.  
Insert the memory card into the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Make sure that all of the data you want to load is in  
the MUSICDAT folder on the memory card.  
Note that if you put data into a music data play-only  
folder on a memory card (such as the MUSIC__B  
folder), you will no longer be able to load that file into  
Digital Piano memory.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
button, press the  
button.  
(CARD/INTERNAL)  
  
This displays the memory card format screen (page  
E-45).  
1.  
Insert the memory card into the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
3.  
4.  
5.  
Press the  
This displays the file delete screen.  
(i) button.  
  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
2.  
Select the data you want to load.  
  
This displays a screen for selecting data for deletion.  
To load this  
Do this:  
type of data*  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the file  
  
User rhythms Select from among user rhythms 001  
through 010 (page E-21).  
you want.  
User songs  
Select from among user songs 001  
through 010 (page E-25).  
6.  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
This will display a confirmation message (SURE?).  
User Music  
Preset  
Select from among user Music Presets  
001 through 050 (page E-28).  
If you want to cancel the delete operation, press the  
(NO) or  
(EXIT) button.  
  
  
Recorder songs Select from among recorder songs 1  
through 5 (page E-34).  
7.  
Press the  
(YES) button.  
  
The message “Please Wait” will remain on the  
display while the delete operation is being  
performed. Do not perform any Digital Piano  
operation while this message is on the display.  
“Complete” appears on the display after deletion is  
complete.  
Registrations  
Press the  
(REGISTRATION) button  
  
so its lower lamp is lit.  
* For more information about data types, see page  
E-44.  
3.  
Hold down the  
until the “LOAD” screen appears for the data  
you selected.  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button  
  
You can cancel the LOAD/SAVE operation any time  
by pressing the  
(EXIT) button.  
  
4.  
5.  
Use the  
you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the file  
  
Press the  
(ENTER) button.  
  
The message “Please Wait” will remain on the  
display while the load operation is being performed.  
Do not perform any Digital Piano operation while  
this message is on the display. “Complete” appears  
on the display after data loading is complete.  
If there already is a file with the same name on the in  
Digital Piano memory, a message (Replace?) will  
appear asking if you want to replace it with the new  
data. Press the  
(YES) button to overwrite or the  
  
  
(NO) button to cancel the load operation.  
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Using a Memory Card  
Renaming a Memory Card File  
Use the following procedure to change the file name of  
a file on a memory card.  
Playing Back a Song from a  
Memory Card  
You can use the procedure below to play back a user  
song (page E-25) stored on a memory card without  
loading the song into Digital Piano memory.  
1.  
2.  
Insert the memory card into the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
Memory Card Folders  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
  
Formatting a memory card on the Digital Piano will  
automatically create the four folders shown below. You  
put playback song data into any one of the folders. You  
can use the four folders to group your music data by  
family member, genre, or some other categories. Use  
button, press the  
button.  
(CARD/INTERNAL)  
  
This displays the memory card format screen (page  
E-45).  
buttons  
through  
(A through D) to select a folder.  
  
  
3.  
Press the  
RENAME” is displayed.  
button (i) twice so “File  
  
Folder Name  
MUSICDAT  
MUSIC__B  
MUSIC__C  
MUSIC__D  
Button Assignment  
(A)  
(B)  
(C)  
(D)  
  
  
  
  
4.  
5.  
Press the (ENTER) button.  
This displays a screen for changing the file name.  
  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the file  
  
you want.  
1.  
2.  
Store the music data you want to play back in  
one of the memory card folders.  
6.  
Use the  
(i) and  
(u) buttons to move  
  
  
the flashing cursor to the character you want  
to change, and then use the (w, q)  
buttons to change the character.  
Insert the memory card into the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
  
The characters you can select are shown below.  
3.  
4.  
Press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button.  
  
0
A
K
U
(
1
B
L
2
3
4
5
F
P
Z
}
6
G
Q
S
7
H
R
&
8
I
9
J
T
'
Press one of the folder selection buttons (  
  
C
D
E
through ) to select the card folder you want.  
  
M N O  
S
_
`
This will display the song number and song  
name of the first song in the folder you  
selected.  
V W X  
Y
{
)
-
^
@ ~  
7.  
8.  
After the file name is the way you want, press  
the (ENTER) button.  
This will display a confirmation message (SURE?).  
If you want to cancel the renaming operation, press  
5.  
6.  
Use the  
song you want.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
  
Press the (PLAY/STOP) button.  
This will start playback.  
Each press of  
playback.  
Fast forward, fast reverse, tempo changes, and other  
operations are the same as those during playback of a  
user song in Digital Piano memory. For details, see  
“Listening to Songs Loaded from an External Source”  
(page E-25).  
the  
(NO) or  
(EXIT) button.  
  
  
(PLAY/STOP) starts and stops  
Press the  
(YES) button.  
  
The message “Please Wait” will remain on the  
display while the rename operation is being  
performed. Do not perform any Digital Piano  
operation while this message is on the display.  
“Complete” appears on the display after renaming is  
complete.  
7.  
To quit memory card data playback, press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button.  
  
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Using a Memory Card  
Playing Back All of the Songs in a Folder  
Saving Data to Digital Piano  
Memory (Internal Area) Instead  
of a Memory Card  
Use the procedure below to select one of the four  
folders on a memory card and play back all of the  
songs in the folder in succession.  
Even when you do not have a memory card loaded in  
the Digital Piano’s memory card slot, you can save up  
to about 16MB of data in the Digital Piano’s internal  
memory area. You also can load and delete internal  
memory area data using the same procedures that you  
use with a memory card.  
1.  
2.  
While holding down the  
(PART) button,  
press the  
(PLAY/STOP) button.  
This will start tone demo tune playback (page E-24).  
Press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button.  
  
This will switch from tone demo tune playback to card  
tune playback.  
While playback is in progress, you can use the  
1.  
Remove the memory card from the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot (page E-45).  
  
through  
buttons (Folder A through Folder D) to  
  
switch playback to another folder.  
To stop playback, press the (PLAY/STOP) button.  
Removing the memory card from the slot enables  
internal memory area data operations (save, load,  
delete, rename, playback).  
Assigning a Different Folder to a Folder  
Selection Button  
To do this  
Perform this operation  
Save data to  
the internal  
memory area  
From step 2 under “Saving Digital  
Piano Data to a Memory Card” on page  
E-46  
You can use the following procedure to assign different  
folders to folder selection buttons  
, , and  
   
.
  
Load data  
from the  
internal  
From step 2 under “Loading Data from  
a Memory Card” on page E-47  
1.  
While holding down the  
button, press the folder selection button ( ,  
(FUNCTION)  
  
  
memory area  
, or ) whose folder assignment you want  
to change.  
This displays the folder assignment screen for the  
button you press.  
   
Delete data  
from the  
internal  
From step 2 under “Deleting Memory  
Card Data” on page E-47  
memory area  
Rename a file  
in the internal Memory Card File” on page E-48  
memory area  
From step 2 under “Renaming a  
2.  
3.  
Use the  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
folder you want to assign to the button.  
You can select any folder on the memory card.  
Play back a  
song in the  
internal  
From step 3 under “Playing Back a  
Song from a Memory Card” on page  
E-48  
• The operation in step 4 of the above  
procedure is not possible in the case  
of internal memory area song  
playback.  
After selecting a folder, you can rename it if  
you want.  
Perform steps 6 through 8 of the procedure under  
“Renaming a Memory Card File” (page E-48) to  
rename the folder.  
memory area  
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Using a Memory Card  
Error Messages  
One of the error messages below appears on the display when a problem occurs.  
All mentions of “memory card” in the following table refer to an SD memory card.  
Display  
Message  
Cause  
Required Action  
Convert  
There is not enough Digital Piano memory available to  
Reduce the size of the recorder song data by deleting unneeded  
convert a recorder song (page E-34) to SMF data and store tracks (page E-37), if there are any.  
it on the memory card.  
Format  
1. The current memory card format is not compatible  
with this Digital Piano.  
1. Format the memory card on the Digital Piano (page E-45).  
2. The memory card capacity is greater than 2GB.  
3. There is something wrong with the memory card.  
2. Use a memory card with a capacity of 2GB or less.  
3. Use a different memory card.  
MediaFull  
Media R/W  
1. There is not enough room available on the memory  
card.  
1. Delete some of the files on the memory card to make room for  
new data (page E-47), or use a different card.  
2. There is not enough room available in Digital Piano  
memory.  
2. Delete some or all user data from Digital Piano memory to make  
room for new data.  
1. Memory card data is corrupted.  
1. Use a different memory card.  
2. Digital Piano memory is corrupted.  
2. Back-up Digital Piano memory data by copying it to your  
computer, and then turn the Digital Piano off and then back on  
again.  
• Note that you may not be able to back-up Digital Piano data  
in certain cases.  
No Card  
1. The memory card is not loaded correctly in the Digital 1. Correctly load the memory card into the memory card slot.  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
2. The memory card was removed while some operation 2. Do not remove the memory card while any operation is in  
was in progress.  
progress.  
No Data  
No File  
You tried to save a Digital Piano user area (user rhythm, Select a user area that contains data.  
user rhythm song, etc.) that does not contain any data to  
the memory card.  
1. There is no MUSICDAT folder (page E-46) on the  
memory card.  
1. Create a MUSICDAT folder on the memory card or format the  
memory card on the Digital Piano (page E-45).  
2. There is no loadable or playable data in the  
MUSICDAT folder, or there is no playable data in a  
song playback folder (MUSIC__B, etc.)  
2. Move the file you want to load or play into the memory card’s  
MUSICDAT folder. For song playback, you can place the song  
data into any one of the following folders: MUSIC__B,  
MUSIC__C, or MUSIC__D.  
Not SMF01  
You are attempting to play back SMF Format 2 song data. This Digital Piano supports playback of SMF Format 0 or Format 1  
only.  
Protect  
The memory card is write-protected.  
Use the memory card’s write protect switch to enable writing.  
ReadOnly  
A read-only file with the same name you are trying to use • Use a different name to save the new file.  
is already stored on the memory card.  
• Remove the read-only attribute from the existing file and  
overwrite it with the new file.  
• Use a different memory card.  
SizeOver  
1. The data on the memory card is too big to play.  
2. The data you are trying to load is too large.  
1. This Digital Piano supports playback of song data files with a  
maximum size of about 320 kbytes.  
2. The following is the maximum data size (per data item) when  
loading data into Digital Piano memory.  
User rhythm: Approximately 40KB  
User Song: 320KB  
User Music Preset: Approximately 8KB  
WrongDat  
1. The memory card data is corrupted.  
2. The memory card contains data that is not supported  
by this Digital Piano.  
E-50  
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Connecting to a Computer  
You can connect the Digital Piano to a computer and  
Connecting the Digital Piano  
exchange MIDI data between them. You can send play  
data from the Digital Piano to music software running  
on your computer, or you can send MIDI data from  
your computer to the Digital Piano for playback.  
to Your Computer  
IMPORTANT!  
• Make sure you follow the steps of the procedure  
below exactly. Connecting incorrectly can make data  
send and receive impossible.  
Minimum Computer System  
Requirements  
1.  
Turn off the Digital Piano and then start up  
your computer.  
The following shows the minimum computer system  
requirements for sending and receiving MIDI data.  
Check to make sure that your computer complies with  
these requirements before connecting the Digital Piano  
to it.  
Do not start up the music software on your computer  
yet!  
2.  
After starting up your computer, use a  
commercially available USB cable to connect  
it to the Digital Piano.  
Operating System  
Windows® XP (SP2 or later)*1  
Windows Vista® *2  
B connector  
Mac OS® X (10.3.9, 10.4.11 or later, 10.5.6 or later)  
*1Windows XP Home Edition  
Windows XP Professional (32- bit)  
*2Windows Vista (32- bit)  
USB cable  
(A-B type)  
A connector  
Digital Piano USB port  
USB port  
Computer USB port  
IMPORTANT!  
• Never connect to a computer that does not conform  
to the above requirements. Doing so can cause  
problems with your computer.  
3.  
Turn on the Digital Piano.  
If this is the first time you are connecting the Digital  
Piano to your computer, the driver software required  
to send and receive data will be installed on your  
computer automatically.  
4.  
5.  
Start up your computer’s music software.  
Configure the music software settings to  
select one of the following as the MIDI device.  
CASIO USB-MIDI : (For Windows Vista, Mac OS X)  
USB Audio Device: (For Windows XP)  
For information about how to select the MIDI device,  
see the user documentation that comes with the  
music software you are using.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Be sure to turn on the Digital Piano first before  
starting up your computer’s music software.  
E-51  
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Connecting to a Computer  
NOTE  
Transferring Data between the  
Digital Piano and a Computer  
You can use the procedure below to transfer edited  
Auto Accompaniment data, recorder data, and other  
data from the Digital Piano to a computer for storage.  
You also can transfer standard MIDI files (SMF), as  
well as Auto Accompaniment data you downloaded  
from the CASIO website from your computer to Digital  
Piano memory.  
Once you are able to connect successfully, there is no  
problem with leaving the USB cable connected when  
you turn off your computer and/or Digital Piano.  
This Digital Piano conforms to General MIDI Level 1  
(GM).  
For detailed specifications and connections that  
apply to MIDI data send and receive by this Digital  
Piano, see the latest support information provided  
by the website at the following URL.  
Data Types Supported for Data Transfer  
Using MIDI  
The types of data that can be exchanged with a  
computer are the same as those that can be saved to an  
SD memory card from the Digital Piano (page E-44).*  
* Recorder songs (page E-34) cannot be converted to  
SMF data for storage on a computer.  
What is MIDI?  
The letters MIDI stand for Musical Instrument Digital  
Interface, which is the name of a worldwide standard  
for digital signals and connectors that makes it possible  
to exchange musical data between musical instruments  
and computers (machines) produced by different  
manufacturers.  
For details about the MIDI specifications of this Digital  
Piano, see the “MIDI Implementation” document at the  
website located at the URL below.  
IMPORTANT!  
• Turning off the Digital Piano while data is being  
saved or loaded can cause all data currently stored  
in Digital Piano memory (recorded songs, etc.) to be  
deleted. Take care so power is not turned off  
accidentally during data save and load operations. If  
data is deleted, it will take longer than normal for the  
Digital Piano to power up the next time you turn it on  
(page E-9).  
NOTE  
1.  
Remove the memory card from the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot (page E-45).  
You will not be able to transfer data between the  
Digital Piano and a computer if a card is in the  
memory card slot.  
You can alter the Digital Piano’s MIDI setup by  
changing the MIDI data send channel or other  
settings. For details, see “MIDI Group” (page E-42).  
Use a separately available or commercially available  
MIDI cable to connect the MIDI terminals of your  
Digital Piano and another electronic musical  
instrument for exchange of MIDI data.  
2.  
Perform steps 1 through 3 under “Connecting  
the Digital Piano to Your Computer” to  
connect the piano to your computer (page  
E-51).  
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Connecting to a Computer  
3.  
While holding down the  
(FUNCTION)  
5.  
6.  
Double-click “PIANO”.  
You now should see five data folders, one for each data  
type.  
  
button, press the  
button.  
(USB DEVICE MODE)  
  
This will enter the storage mode, which enables data  
transfer with the connected computer. The  
(FUNCTION) button lamp will flash and the display  
  
will appear as shown below.  
This folder is not a data folder. You should not try to  
use it for normal Digital Piano operation.  
To exit the storage mode at any time, press the  
(FUNCTION) button. This is the only button  
operation that is supported while the Digital Piano is  
in the storage mode.  
You will not be able to enter the storage mode while  
any one of the following operations is in progress.  
Metronome, Auto Accompaniment, song playback,  
recorder (on), Auto Accompaniment editing, Music  
Preset editing, data transfer between the Digital  
Piano and card  
  
Referring to the table below, open the folder  
that corresponds to the type of data you want  
to transfer.  
To load this  
type of data  
Open this data  
folder  
Data File Name  
User rhythms  
(page E-21)  
BIDRHYnn.AC7  
(nn: 01 to 10)  
RHYTHMAC  
MUSICLIB  
BIDSNGnn.MID  
(nn: 01 to 10)  
(SMF Format 0 or  
Format 1)  
BIDSNGnn.CM2  
(nn: 01 to 10)  
(CASIO format)  
4.  
If your computer is running Windows XP,  
double-click “My Computer”.*  
Under “Devices with Removable Storage”, you should  
be able to see a folder representing Digital Piano  
memory or the memory card loaded in the Digital  
Piano (see below).  
User songs  
(page E-25)  
* Windows Vista: Double-click “Computer”.  
Mac OS: Skip step 4 and double-click “PIANO” on  
your Mac desktop.  
User Music Presets  
(page E-28)  
BIDMPSnn.MPS  
(nn: 01 to 50)  
MUSICPST  
RECORDER  
REGISTMR  
Recorder songs  
(page E-34)  
BIDRECnn.CSR  
(nn: 01 to 05)  
Registration  
(page E-32)  
BIDREGAL.CR6  
Data types and contents are the same as those when  
saving Digital Piano data to or loading it from an SD  
memory card. See “Using a Memory Card” (page  
E-44) for more information.  
PIANO drive (Digital Piano memory)  
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Connecting to a Computer  
7.  
File name extensions (.MID, .CM2, etc.) are  
not displayed under initial default Windows  
settings. Perform the procedure below to turn  
on display of file name extensions.  
(1) Open any one of the folders shown above.  
(2) Perform one of the following operations to display  
folder information.  
IMPORTANT!  
• The message “ERROR, DATA EXCHANGE” will  
appear on the display if a problem occurs during  
data transfer. If this happens, check the message in  
the “STATELOG” folder (page E-53) on the “PIANO”  
drive. Next find the same message in the table on  
page E-50 of this manual to determine the cause of  
the problem and what action you need to take to  
avoid it.  
Windows XP:  
On the [Tools] menu at the top of the folder  
window, select [Folder Options].  
Windows Vista:  
On the left side of the folder window, click  
[Organize] and then select [Folder and Search  
Options].  
(3) On the Folder Information window, click the  
[View] tab.  
(4) Under “Advanced Settings”, clear the “Hide  
extensions for known file types” check box and  
then click [OK].  
8.  
After opening a data folder, perform either of  
the following operations to transfer data.  
8-1.To transfer data from Digital Piano  
memory to a computer, perform the  
required operation on your computer to  
copy the data from the Digital Piano  
folder you opened in step 6 of this  
procedure to another location on your  
computer.  
8-2.To load data from your computer to  
Digital Piano memory, first copy the data  
you want to load to the data folder you  
opened. Next, rename the file as shown  
in the “Data File Name” * column in the  
table under step 6 of this procedure.  
* The value you assign for “nn” in the data file name in  
this case specifies the user number (user rhythm, user  
song, recorder song, user preset) you want the data to  
be assigned to.  
Example: Renaming downloaded song data to  
BIDSNG04.CM2 to the MUSICLIB folder will  
make the data user song 004.  
9.  
Press the  
storage mode.  
(FUNCTION) button to exit the  
  
If you are using a Macintosh, drag the PIANO folder  
to the Trash and then press the Digital Piano’s  
  
(FUNCTION) button.  
E-54  
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Connecting to a Computer  
Playing Back User Song Data by Copying  
It to the PIANO Drive  
Using Your Digital Piano as a Memory  
Card Reader  
You can use the procedure below at any time to copy  
user song data to the PIANO drive (without putting it  
in the MUSICLIB folder) for simplified playback on the  
Digital Piano.  
You can display the contents of the memory card  
currently loaded in the Digital Piano’s card slot and  
perform copy, delete, and other card operations from  
your computer.  
When you copy a user song data file to the  
MUSICLIB folder, you need to rename it according  
to specified format (page E-53, step 6). You do not  
need to rename the file if you use the procedure  
below.  
1.  
2.  
Insert the memory card into the Digital  
Piano’s memory card slot.  
Perform the procedure starting from step 2 on  
page E-52.  
In step 4 of the procedure, “SD_MMC” will appear in  
place of “PIANO”. You can double-click “SD_MMC” to  
display the contents of the card loaded in the Digital  
Piano card slot, and change it as you like.  
Using Auto Accompaniment Data from the  
CASIO Website  
You can download other model Auto Accompaniment  
data from the “Internet Data Expansion System” of the  
CASIO Music Site (http://music.casio.com/) and  
transfer it to Digital Piano memory.  
CASIO format song data  
MIDI file song data  
1.  
2.  
Perform the previous procedure to copy the  
user song data file to the PIANO drive.  
NOTE  
Since the accompaniment data is for other models,  
you may experience some abnormalities when  
playing it on this model.  
Press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button.  
  
This will cause the button’s lamp to light and will the  
display the song number and song name of the first  
song on the PIANO drive.  
Copyrights  
The rights of creators and copyright holders of music,  
images, computer programs, databases, and other  
data are protected by copyright laws. You are allowed  
to reproduce such works for personal or non-  
commercial use only. For any other purpose, all  
reproduction (including data format conversion),  
modification, transfer of reproductions, distribution  
over a network, or any other use without permission  
of the copyright holder exposes you to claims for  
damages and criminal prosecution for copyright  
infringement and violation of the author’s personal  
rights. Be sure to reproduce and otherwise use  
copyrighted works only in accordance with applicable  
copyright laws.  
3.  
4.  
Use the  
song you want to play.  
(w, q) buttons to select the  
  
Press the (PLAY/STOP) button.  
This starts playback of the selected song.  
Each press of the (PLAY/STOP) button toggles  
between play and stop.  
Fast forward, fast reverse, tempo change, and other  
operations are the same as those during playback of a  
loaded user song and a song file on a memory card.  
5.  
When you are finished playing back songs,  
press the  
(CARD/INTERNAL) button.  
  
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Reference  
Troubleshooting  
Problem  
Cause  
Action  
See Page  
No sound is produced when I  
press a keyboard key.  
1. The VOLUME controller is set to  
“MIN”.  
1. Rotate the VOLUME controller more towards E-9  
“MAX”.  
2. Headphones or an adaptor plug is  
plugged into one of the PHONES  
jacks.  
2. Disconnect whatever is connected to the  
PHONES jack.  
E-6  
The pitch of the Digital Piano is  
off.  
1. The Digital Piano’s key setting is  
something other than “00”.  
1. Change the key setting to “00”, or turn Digital E-41  
Piano power off and then back on again.  
2. Digital Piano tuning is incorrect.  
2. Adjust Digital Piano tuning, or turn the piano  
off and then back on again.  
E-41  
E-41  
3. A non-standard temperament setting  
is being used.  
3. Change the temperament setting to  
“00:Equal”, which is the standard modern  
tuning.  
4. Octave shift is enabled.  
4. Change the octave shift setting to 0.  
E-12  
E-43  
Tones and/or effects sound  
strange. Turning power off and  
then back on again does not  
eliminate the problem.  
The “Setting Backup” feature is turned  
on.  
Turn off “Setting Backup”. Next, turn power off  
and then back on again.  
Example: Note intensity does not  
change even though I alter key  
pressure.  
I cannot transfer data after  
connecting the Digital Piano to a  
computer.  
1. Check to make sure that the USB cable is  
connected to the Digital Piano and computer,  
and that the correct device is selected with  
your computer’s music software.  
E-51  
2. Turn off the Digital Piano and then exit the  
music software on your computer. Next, turn  
the Digital Piano back on and then restart the  
music software on your computer.  
I cannot record chord  
accompaniment data on my  
computer.  
Accomp MIDI Out is turned off.  
Turn on Accomp MIDI Out.  
E-42  
I cannot store data to a memory  
card or load data from a memory  
card.  
See “Error Messages” on page E-50.  
Stop song playback, disconnect the USB cable  
Playback stops part way through Digital noise from the USB cable or  
E-51  
while transferring song data from power cord caused data communication from the Digital Piano, and then reconnect it.  
my computer.  
your computer and Digital Piano to be  
interrupted.  
Next, try playing back the song again.  
If this does not solve the problem, quit the MIDI  
software you are using, disconnect the USB  
cable from the Digital Piano, and then reconnect  
it. Next, restart the MIDI software and then try  
playing back the song again.  
A tone’s quality and volume  
sounds slightly different  
depending where it is played on  
the keyboard.  
This is an unavoidable result of the digital sampling process,* and does not indicate malfunction.  
* Multiple digital samples are taken for the low range, middle range, and high range of the original  
musical instrument. Because of this, there may be a very slight difference in tonal quality and volume  
between sample ranges.  
When I press a button, the note  
that is sounding cuts out  
momentarily or there is a slight  
change in how effects are applied.  
Performing a button operation while playing with the Duet Mode, Auto Accompaniment, the recorder, or  
other functions can cause such phenomena when the Digital Piano switches internal tone effects. It does  
not indicate malfunction.  
Even though I play on different  
The ranges of certain tones are limited, which means that octaves change normally up to a certain low  
ranges of the keyboard, the notes note or high note. With such a tone, the notes of the lowest octave will be repeated to the left of the  
do not change octaves.  
lowest possible note, and the highest octave will be repeated to the right of the highest possible note.  
This is due do limitations in the range of the original musical instrument for each tone, and does not  
indicate malfunction of the Digital Piano.  
E-56  
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Reference  
Product Specifications  
Model  
PX-330BK  
Keyboard  
Maximum Polyphony  
Tones  
88-key piano keyboard, with Touch Response (3 types)  
128 notes  
250 (with Layer and Split)  
Effects  
Reverb (4 types), Chorus (4 types), Brilliance (–3 to 0 to 3), Acoustic Resonance  
Metronome  
• Beats per measure: 0, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6  
• Tempo Range: 20 to 255  
Duet  
Adjustable tone range: 0 to 3 octaves for the left keyboard; –4 to –1 octaves for the right keyboard  
Auto Accompaniment  
• Built-in Rhythms: 180  
• User Rhythms: Up to 10 (Approximately 40KB* maximum per rhythm)  
• One Touch Presets: 180 types  
• Auto Harmonize: 12 types  
Demo Songs  
User Songs  
8 songs (tone demo songs)  
Up to 10 songs (320KB* maximum per song)  
Music Presets  
Built-in Presets: 300  
User Presets: Up to 50 (Approximately 8KB* maximum per preset)  
Registration  
Recorder  
(4 rhythm areas + 8 tone areas) × 8 banks  
• Functions: Real-time recording, playback  
• Number of Songs: 5  
• Number of Tracks: 17 (System Track + Tracks 01 through 16)  
• Capacity: Approximately 50,000 notes total (Up to approximately 10,000 notes per song)  
• Punch-in recording  
Pedals  
Damper, Soft/Sostenuto (switchable)  
Other Functions  
• Transpose: 1 octave (–12 to 00 to 12)  
• Tuning: A4 = 440.0 Hz 99 cents  
• Octave Shift: 2 octaves  
• Temperaments: 17 types  
• Stretch Tune  
• Panel Lock  
MIDI  
16 multi-timbre received, GM Level 1 standard  
Pitch Bend Range: 00 to 12 semitones  
Pitch Bend Wheel  
SD Memory Card  
• SD memory card slot  
• Supported SD Memory Cards: Up to 2GB  
• Functions: SMF playback, file storage, file recall, card format  
Inputs/Outputs  
PHONES jacks: Stereo mini jacks × 2  
• Pedal Jacks: Standard jacks × 2  
MIDI OUT/IN terminals  
LINE OUT R, L/MONO jacks: Standard jacks × 2  
Output impedance: 2.3K  
Output voltage: 1.8V (RMS) MAX  
LINE IN R, L/MONO jacks: Standard jacks × 2  
Input impedance: 9.0K  
Input voltage: 200mV  
• Power: 12V DC  
USB port: Type B  
• Pedal connector (for optional SP-32 only)  
Speakers  
[13cm × 6cm (rectangular)] × 2 + 5cm × 2 (Output: 8.0W + 8.0W)  
AC Adaptor: AD-A12150LW  
Power Requirements  
Power Consumption  
Dimensions  
12V = 18W  
132.2 (W) × 28.6 (D) × 13.5 (H) cm (52 1/16 × 11 1/4 × 5 5/16 inch)  
Weight  
Approximately 11.6kg (25.6lbs)  
* Based on 1KB = 1024bytes, 1MB = 10242 bytes  
• Specifications and designs are subject to change without notice.  
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Reference  
Any reproduction of the contents of this manual,  
either in part or its entirety, is prohibited. Except for  
your own, personal use, any other use of the  
contents of this manual without the consent of  
CASIO is prohibited under copyright laws.  
IN NO EVENT SHALL CASIO BE LIABLE FOR  
ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER (INCLUDING,  
WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS  
OF PROFITS, BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, LOSS  
OF INFORMATION) ARISING OUT OF THE USE  
OF OR INABILITY TO USE THIS MANUAL OR  
PRODUCT, EVEN IF CASIO HAS BEEN ADVISED  
OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.  
The contents of this manual are subject to change  
without notice.  
Operating Precautions  
Be sure to read and observe the following operating  
precautions.  
Location  
Avoid the following locations for this product.  
Areas exposed to direct sunlight and high humidity  
Areas subjected to temperature extremes  
Near a radio, TV, video deck, or tuner  
The above devices will not cause malfunction of the  
product, but the product can cause interference in  
the audio or video of a nearby device.  
User Maintenance  
Never use benzine, alcohol, thinner, or other  
chemical agents to clean the product.  
To clean the product or its keyboard, wipe with a  
soft cloth moistened in a weak solution of water and  
a mild neutral detergent. Wring all excess moisture  
from the cloth before wiping.  
AC Adaptor Handling Precautions  
Use a power outlet that is easily accessible so you  
can unplug the AC adaptor when a malfunction  
occurs or whenever else you need to do so.  
The AC adaptor is intended for indoor use only. Do  
not use it where it might be exposed to splashing or  
moisture. Do not place any container, such as a  
flower vase, that contains liquid on the AC adaptor.  
Store the AC adaptor in a dry place.  
Use the AC adaptor in an open, well-ventilated area.  
Never cover the AC adaptor with newspaper, a table  
cloth, a curtain, or any other similar item.  
Unplug the AC adaptor from the power outlet if you  
do not plan to use the Digital Piano for a long time.  
Never try to repair the AC adaptor or modify it in  
any way.  
Included and Optional Accessories  
Use only accessories that are specified for use with this  
product. Use of unauthorized accessories creates the  
risk of fire, electric shock, and personal injury.  
Weld Lines  
Lines may be visible on the exterior of the product.  
These are “weld lines” that result from the plastic  
molding process. They are not cracks or scratches.  
AC adaptor operating environment  
Temperature: 0 to 40°C  
Humidity: 10% to 90% RH  
Output polarity:  
Musical Instrument Etiquette  
Always be aware of others around you whenever using  
this product. Be especially careful when playing late at  
night to keep the volume at levels that do not disturb  
others. Other steps you can take when playing late at  
night are closing windows and using headphones.  
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Reference  
AC Adaptor Handling Precautions  
Model: AD-A12150LW  
1. Read these instructions.  
2. Keep these instructions on hand.  
3. Heed all warnings.  
4. Follow all instructions.  
5. Do not use this product near water.  
6. Clean only with a dry cloth.  
7. Do not install near radiators, heat registers, stoves, or any other source of heat (including amplifiers).  
8. Use only attachments and accessories specified by the manufacturer.  
9. Refer all servicing to qualified service personnel. Servicing is required after any of the following occurs:  
when the product is damaged, when the power supply cord or plug is damaged, when liquid is spilled into  
the product, when a foreign object falls into the product, when the product is exposed to rain or moisture,  
when the product does not operate normally, when the product is dropped.  
10. Do not allow the product to be exposed to dripping or splashing liquid. Do not place any object containing  
liquid on the product.  
11. Do not allow the electrical load output to exceed the label rating.  
12. Make sure the surrounding area is dry before plugging into a power source.  
13. Make sure the product is oriented correctly.  
14. Unplug the product during lightning storms or when you do not plan to use it for a long time.  
15. Do not allow product ventilation openings to become blocked. Install the product in accordance with the  
manufacturer’s instructions.  
16. Take care the power cord is located where it will not be stepped upon or bent severely, particularly in  
locations close to plugs and convenience receptacles, and in locations where it exits from the product.  
17. The AC adaptor should be plugged into a power outlet as close to the product as possible to allow  
immediate disconnection of the plug in case of emergency.  
The symbol below is an alert indicating un-insulated hazardous voltage inside the product’s enclosure, which  
may be sufficient to constitute the risk of electric shock to users.  
The symbol below is an alert indicating the presence of important operating and maintenance (servicing)  
instructions in the documentation that accompanies the product.  
*
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Tone List/Lista de tonos  
Bank  
Select  
MSB/  
MSB de  
Selección  
de banco  
Bank  
Select  
MSB/  
MSB de  
Selección  
de banco  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre Número  
del  
grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Program  
Change/  
Cambio  
de  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre Número  
del  
grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Program  
Change/  
Cambio  
de  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Acoustic  
Resonance/  
Resonancia  
acústica  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Acoustic  
Resonance/  
Resonancia  
acústica  
Tone Name/  
Nombre del tono  
Tone Name/  
Nombre del tono  
de  
grupo  
de  
grupo  
secuencial  
secuencial  
programa  
programa  
GRAND PIANO MODERN  
009  
010  
011  
012  
013  
014  
015  
016  
017  
064  
065  
066  
067  
068  
069  
070  
071  
072  
STEEL STR.GUITAR 1  
STEEL STR.GUITAR 2  
STEEL STR.GUITAR 3  
JAZZ GUITAR  
25  
25  
25  
26  
27  
27  
27  
27  
29  
48  
49  
50  
48  
49  
48  
50  
51  
48  
001  
001  
GRAND PIANO MODERN  
0
0
48  
50  
O
O
GRAND PIANO  
VARIATION  
002  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
003  
004  
005  
006  
ROCK PIANO  
LA PIANO  
1
1
1
1
48  
49  
50  
51  
O
O
O
O
CLEAN GUITAR  
CHORUS CLEAN GUITAR  
CRUNCH ELEC.GUITAR 1  
CRUNCH ELEC.GUITAR 2  
OVERDRIVE GUITAR  
MODERN PIANO  
DANCE PIANO  
GRAND PIANO CLASSIC  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
011  
012  
GRAND PIANO CLASSIC  
MELLOW PIANO  
HONKY-TONK  
0
0
3
3
0
0
49  
51  
48  
49  
52  
53  
O
O
O
O
O
O
VARIOUS/GM TONES  
073  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
011  
012  
013  
014  
015  
016  
017  
018  
019  
020  
021  
022  
023  
024  
025  
026  
027  
028  
029  
030  
031  
032  
033  
034  
035  
036  
037  
038  
039  
040  
041  
042  
043  
044  
045  
046  
047  
048  
049  
050  
051  
052  
053  
054  
055  
056  
057  
058  
059  
060  
061  
BREATHY ALTO SAX  
BREATHY TENOR SAX  
ALTO SAX  
65  
66  
65  
66  
71  
73  
56  
57  
61  
61  
62  
62  
81  
81  
80  
110  
15  
15  
72  
107  
109  
111  
77  
105  
105  
104  
104  
20  
15  
105  
111  
110  
15  
105  
72  
16  
0
49  
49  
48  
48  
48  
48  
48  
48  
48  
49  
48  
49  
48  
49  
48  
56  
56  
57  
56  
56  
56  
57  
56  
56  
57  
56  
57  
56  
58  
58  
56  
57  
59  
59  
57  
56  
0
074  
075  
076  
077  
078  
079  
080  
081  
082  
083  
084  
085  
086  
087  
088  
089  
090  
091  
092  
093  
094  
095  
096  
097  
098  
099  
100  
101  
102  
103  
104  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
110  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
121  
122  
123  
124  
125  
126  
127  
128  
129  
130  
131  
132  
133  
OCTAVE PIANO  
STRINGS PIANO  
PIANO PAD  
TENOR SAX  
CLARINET  
ELEC PIANO  
FLUTE  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
013  
014  
015  
016  
017  
018  
019  
020  
021  
ELEC.PIANO 1  
4
5
4
2
4
5
4
5
4
48  
48  
51  
48  
49  
49  
50  
50  
52  
TRUMPET  
ELEC.PIANO 2  
TROMBONE  
STEREO BRASS  
BRASS SECTION  
SYNTH-BRASS  
80’S SYNTH-BRASS  
SAW LEAD  
60’S E.PIANO  
E.GRAND 80  
DYNO ELEC.PIANO  
FM ELEC.PIANO  
MELLOW E.PIANO  
POP ELEC.PIANO  
SYNTH-STR.E.PIANO  
MELLOW SAW LEAD  
SQUARE LEAD  
ER HU  
VIBES/CLAVI  
001  
002  
003  
022  
023  
024  
VIBRAPHONE  
CLAVI  
11  
7
48  
48  
48  
YANG QIN 1  
YANG QIN 2  
DI ZI  
HARPSICHORD  
6
COUPLED  
HARPSICHORD  
ZHENG  
004  
025  
6
49  
SHENG  
005  
006  
026  
027  
MARIMBA  
12  
11  
48  
49  
SUO NA  
CHORUS VIBRAPHONE  
XIAO  
ORGAN  
PI PA 1  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
011  
012  
013  
028  
029  
030  
031  
032  
033  
034  
035  
036  
037  
038  
039  
040  
ROCK ORGAN 1  
JAZZ ORGAN  
16  
17  
16  
16  
16  
17  
17  
16  
16  
18  
16  
19  
19  
49  
48  
48  
50  
51  
49  
50  
52  
53  
48  
54  
48  
49  
PI PA 2  
SITAR  
DRAWBAR ORGAN  
ROTARY DRAWBAR  
ROTARY ORGAN  
PERC.ORGAN  
TANPURA  
HARMONIUM  
SANTUR  
SAROD  
70’S ORGAN  
SHANAI  
OVERDRIVE ORGAN  
TREMOLO ORGAN  
ROCK ORGAN 2  
ELEC.ORGAN  
SARANGI  
KANUN  
OUD  
NEY  
CHURCH ORGAN  
CHAPEL ORGAN  
ARABIC ORGAN  
GM PIANO 1  
GM PIANO 2  
GM PIANO 3  
GM HONKY-TONK  
GM E.PIANO 1  
GM E.PIANO 2  
GM HARPSICHORD  
GM CLAVI  
O
O
STRINGS/SYNTH-PAD  
1
0
001  
041  
STRINGS  
49  
48  
50  
50  
50  
40  
52  
54  
90  
88  
88  
89  
89  
90  
99  
48  
48  
48  
49  
50  
48  
48  
48  
48  
48  
49  
48  
49  
49  
48  
2
0
002  
042  
043  
044  
045  
046  
047  
048  
049  
050  
051  
052  
053  
054  
055  
STRING ENSEMBLE  
SYNTH-STRINGS  
70’S SYNTH-STR.  
80’S SYNTH-STR.  
VIOLIN SECTION  
CHOIR  
3
0
003  
4
0
004  
5
0
005  
6
0
006  
7
0
007  
GM CELESTA  
GM GLOCKENSPIEL  
GM MUSIC BOX  
GM VIBRAPHONE  
GM MARIMBA  
GM XYLOPHONE  
GM TUBULAR BELL  
GM DULCIMER  
GM ORGAN 1  
GM ORGAN 2  
GM ORGAN 3  
GM PIPE ORGAN  
GM REED ORGAN  
GM ACCORDION  
GM HARMONICA  
GM BANDONEON  
GM NYLON STR.GUITAR  
8
0
008  
SYNTH-VOICE  
SYNTH-PAD  
9
0
009  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
0
010  
FANTASY  
0
011  
NEW AGE  
0
012  
WARM PAD  
0
013  
WARM VOX  
0
014  
POLYSYNTH PAD  
ATMOSPHERE PAD  
0
015  
0
BASS/GUITAR  
0
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
056  
057  
058  
059  
060  
061  
062  
063  
ACOUSTIC BASS  
RIDE BASS  
32  
32  
33  
33  
33  
34  
38  
24  
48  
49  
48  
49  
50  
48  
48  
48  
0
0
FINGERED BASS 1  
FINGERED BASS 2  
FINGERED BASS 3  
PICKED BASS  
0
0
0
0
TRANCE BASS  
0
NYLON STR.GUITAR  
A-1  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Bank  
Select  
MSB/  
MSB de  
Selección  
de banco  
Bank  
Select  
MSB/  
MSB de  
Selección  
de banco  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre Número  
del  
grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Program  
Change/  
Cambio  
de  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre Número  
del  
grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Program  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Acoustic  
Resonance/  
Resonancia  
acústica  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Acoustic  
Resonance/  
Resonancia  
acústica  
Change/  
Cambio  
de  
Tone Name/  
Nombre del tono  
Tone Name/  
Nombre del tono  
de  
grupo  
de  
grupo  
secuencial  
secuencial  
programa  
programa  
062  
063  
064  
065  
066  
067  
068  
069  
070  
071  
072  
073  
074  
075  
076  
077  
078  
079  
080  
081  
082  
083  
084  
085  
086  
087  
088  
089  
090  
091  
092  
093  
094  
095  
096  
097  
098  
099  
100  
101  
102  
103  
104  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
110  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
121  
122  
123  
124  
125  
126  
127  
128  
129  
130  
131  
132  
133  
134  
135  
136  
137  
138  
139  
134  
135  
136  
137  
138  
139  
140  
141  
142  
143  
144  
145  
146  
147  
148  
149  
150  
151  
152  
153  
154  
155  
156  
157  
158  
159  
160  
161  
162  
163  
164  
165  
166  
167  
168  
169  
170  
171  
172  
173  
174  
175  
176  
177  
178  
179  
180  
181  
182  
183  
184  
185  
186  
187  
188  
189  
190  
191  
192  
193  
194  
195  
196  
197  
198  
199  
200  
201  
202  
203  
204  
205  
206  
207  
208  
209  
210  
211  
GM STEEL STR.GUITAR  
GM JAZZ GUITAR  
GM CLEAN GUITAR  
GM MUTE GUITAR  
GM OVERDRIVE GT  
GM DISTORTION GT  
GM GT HARMONICS  
GM ACOUSTIC BASS  
GM FINGERED BASS  
GM PICKED BASS  
GM FRETLESS BASS  
GM SLAP BASS 1  
GM SLAP BASS 2  
GM SYNTH-BASS 1  
GM SYNTH-BASS 2  
GM VIOLIN  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
58  
59  
60  
61  
62  
63  
64  
65  
66  
67  
68  
69  
70  
71  
72  
73  
74  
75  
76  
77  
78  
79  
80  
81  
82  
83  
84  
85  
86  
87  
88  
89  
90  
91  
92  
93  
94  
95  
96  
97  
98  
99  
100  
101  
102  
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
140  
141  
142  
143  
144  
145  
146  
147  
148  
149  
150  
151  
152  
153  
154  
155  
156  
157  
158  
159  
160  
161  
162  
163  
164  
165  
166  
167  
168  
169  
170  
171  
172  
173  
174  
175  
176  
177  
178  
212  
213  
214  
215  
216  
217  
218  
219  
220  
221  
222  
223  
224  
225  
226  
227  
228  
229  
230  
231  
232  
233  
234  
235  
236  
237  
238  
239  
240  
241  
242  
243  
244  
245  
246  
247  
248  
249  
250  
GM SF  
103  
104  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
110  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
121  
122  
123  
124  
125  
126  
127  
0
0
0
GM SITAR  
GM BANJO  
0
GM SHAMISEN  
GM KOTO  
0
0
GM THUMB PIANO  
GM BAGPIPE  
0
0
GM FIDDLE  
0
GM SHANAI  
0
GM TINKLE BELL  
GM AGOGO  
0
0
GM STEEL DRUMS  
GM WOOD BLOCK  
GM TAIKO  
0
0
0
GM MELODIC TOM  
GM SYNTH-DRUM  
GM REVERSE CYMBAL  
GM GT FRET NOISE  
GM BREATH NOISE  
GM SEASHORE  
GM BIRD  
0
0
GM VIOLA  
0
GM CELLO  
0
GM CONTRABASS  
GM TREMOLO STRINGS  
GM PIZZICATO  
0
0
0
GM HARP  
GM TELEPHONE  
GM HELICOPTER  
GM APPLAUSE  
GM GUNSHOT  
STANDARD SET 1  
STANDARD SET 2  
STANDARD SET 3  
STANDARD SET 4  
ROOM SET  
0
GM TIMPANI  
0
GM STRINGS 1  
0
GM STRINGS 2  
0
GM SYNTH-STRINGS 1  
GM SYNTH-STRINGS 2  
GM CHOIR AAHS  
GM VOICE DOO  
GM SYNTH-VOICE  
GM ORCHESTRA HIT  
GM TRUMPET  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
120  
1
2
3
8
HIP-HOP SET  
9
POWER SET  
16  
GM TROMBONE  
GM TUBA  
ELECTRONIC SET  
SYNTH SET 1  
24  
25  
GM MUTE TRUMPET  
GM FRENCH HORN  
GM BRASS  
SYNTH SET 2  
30  
TRANCE SET  
31  
JAZZ SET  
32  
GM SYNTH-BRASS 1  
GM SYNTH-BRASS 2  
GM SOPRANO SAX  
GM ALTO SAX  
BRUSH SET  
40  
ORCHESTRA SET  
48  
NOTE  
GM TENOR SAX  
GM BARITONE SAX  
GM OBOE  
Acoustic resonance (page E-41) is applied only to  
tones indicated by “O”.  
GM ENGLISH HORN  
GM BASSOON  
While sequential numbered tone 065 (STEEL  
STR.GUITAR 2) or 066 (STEEL STR.GUITAR 3) is  
selected, pressing multiple keys on the far left side of  
the keyboard will produce a guitar strumming  
sound. It does not indicate malfunction.  
See the “Drum Assignment List” (page A-3) for the  
percussion instrument assigned to each keyboard  
key when a drum set (Sequential Number 237 to 250)  
is selected.  
GM CLARINET  
GM PICCOLO  
GM FLUTE  
GM RECORDER  
GM PAN FLUTE  
GM BOTTLE BLOW  
GM SHAKUHACHI  
GM WHISTLE  
GM OCARINA  
GM SQUARE LEAD  
GM SAW LEAD  
GM CALLIOPE  
GM CHIFF LEAD  
GM CHARANG  
NOTA  
GM VOICE LEAD  
GM FIFTH LEAD  
GM BASS+LEAD  
GM FANTASY  
La resonancia acústica (página S-42) se aplica  
solamente a los tonos indicados mediante “O”.  
Cuando los tonos secuenciales número 065 (STEEL  
STR. GUITAR 2) o 066 (STEEL STR. GUITAR 3)  
estén seleccionados, si presiona múltiples teclas en el  
extremo izquierdo del teclado producirá un sonido  
de rasgueo de guitarra. Esto no es ningún signo de  
anomalía.  
Consulte la “Lista de asignación de batería”  
(página A-3) para saber cuáles son los instrumentos  
de percusión asignados a cada tecla cuando se  
selecciona un ajuste de batería (números  
secuenciales 237 a 250).  
GM WARM PAD  
GM POLYSYNTH  
GM SPACE CHOIR  
GM BOWED GLASS  
GM METAL PAD  
GM HALO PAD  
GM SWEEP PAD  
GM RAIN DROP  
GM SOUND TRACK  
GM CRYSTAL  
GM ATMOSPHERE  
GM BRIGHTNESS  
GM GOBLINS  
GM ECHOES  
A-2  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
A-3  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Rhythm List/Lista de ritmos  
Group  
Number/  
Número de  
grupo  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Group  
Number/  
Número de  
grupo  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Group Name/  
Nombre del  
grupo  
Group Name/  
Nombre del  
grupo  
Rhythm name/  
Nombre del ritmo  
Rhythm name/  
Nombre del ritmo  
secuencial  
secuencial  
POPS/JAZZ  
059  
060  
061  
062  
063  
064  
065  
066  
059  
060  
061  
062  
063  
064  
065  
066  
WALTZ 2  
POPS  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
SLOW WALTZ  
VIENNESE WALTZ  
FRENCH WALTZ  
SERENADE  
TANGO  
MARCH 1  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
POP 1  
POP 2  
FAST POP  
FUNK POP  
POP ROCK  
6/8 POP  
FAST SOUL  
SLOW SOUL  
60’S SOUL  
POP SHUFFLE  
MARCH 2  
LATIN/WORLD  
LATIN I  
001  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
011  
012  
013  
014  
015  
067  
068  
069  
070  
071  
072  
073  
074  
075  
076  
077  
078  
079  
080  
081  
BOSSA NOVA  
SLOW BOSSA NOVA  
BEGUINE  
SAMBA 1  
SAMBA 2  
MAMBO  
RHUMBA  
CHA-CHA-CHA  
MERENGUE  
BOLERO  
SALSA 1  
SALSA 2  
REGGAE  
POP REGGAE  
SKA  
8 BEAT/16 BEAT  
011  
011  
012  
013  
014  
015  
016  
017  
018  
019  
020  
021  
STRAIGHT 8 BEAT 1  
STRAIGHT 8 BEAT 2  
FUNK 8 BEAT  
MELLOW 8 BEAT  
GUITAR 8 BEAT  
8 BEAT  
8 BEAT POP  
OLDIES 8 BEAT  
60’S 8 BEAT  
012  
013  
014  
015  
016  
017  
018  
019  
020  
021  
16 BEAT  
16 BEAT SHUFFLE  
DANCE  
022  
022  
023  
024  
025  
026  
027  
028  
029  
HIP-HOP  
DANCE POP  
DISCO POP  
TECHNO POP  
TRANCE  
MODERN R&B  
MODERN DANCE  
DISCO SOUL  
LATIN II  
016  
023  
024  
025  
026  
027  
028  
029  
082  
083  
084  
085  
086  
087  
088  
089  
090  
091  
092  
REGGAETON 1  
REGGAETON 2  
CUMBIA  
CALYPSO  
FORRO  
PAGODE  
BANDA  
PASILLO  
ARGENTINE CUMBIA  
PUNTA  
017  
018  
019  
020  
021  
022  
023  
024  
ROCK  
030  
030  
031  
032  
033  
034  
035  
036  
037  
038  
039  
040  
041  
042  
043  
044  
045  
STRAIGHT ROCK  
SHUFFLE ROCK  
BLUES 1  
BLUES 2  
EP BLUES  
SLOW BLUES  
SOFT ROCK  
LATIN ROCK  
SLOW ROCK  
50’S ROCK  
50’S PIANO ROCK  
NEW ORLNS R&R  
60’S ROCK  
031  
032  
033  
034  
035  
036  
037  
038  
039  
040  
041  
042  
043  
044  
045  
025  
026  
BACHATA  
COUNTRY  
027  
093  
094  
095  
096  
MODERN COUNTRY  
COUNTRY 8 BEAT  
COUNTRY BALLAD  
COUNTRY SHUFFLE  
FINGER PICKING  
COUNTRY  
028  
029  
030  
031  
097  
032  
033  
WORLD I  
AMERICAN  
034  
098  
099  
COUNTRY WALTZ  
BLUEGRASS  
ROCK  
70’S PIANO ROCK  
ROCK WALTZ  
100  
101  
102  
103  
104  
DIXIE  
TEX-MEX  
FAST GOSPEL  
SLOW GOSPEL  
HAWAIIAN  
035  
036  
037  
038  
JAZZ  
046  
046  
047  
048  
049  
050  
051  
052  
053  
054  
055  
SLOW BIG BAND  
MIDDLE BIG BAND  
FAST BIG BAND  
SWING 1  
047  
048  
049  
050  
051  
052  
053  
054  
SPANISH/EASTERN EUROPEAN  
039  
040  
041  
042  
043  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
PASODOBLE  
CAUCASIAN  
RUSSIAN CHANSON 1  
RUSSIAN CHANSON 2  
POLISH WALTZ  
SWING 2  
SLOW SWING  
JAZZ WALTZ  
FOX TROT  
QUICKSTEP  
JAZZ COMBO 1  
ARABIC/ORIENTAL  
044  
045  
046  
047  
048  
049  
110  
SIRTAKI  
MUS  
ADANI  
BALADI  
KHALIJI  
MALFOOF  
055  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
EUROPEAN  
056  
056  
057  
058  
SCHLAGER  
POLKA  
WALTZ 1  
057  
058  
A-4  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Group  
Group Name/  
Number/  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Group  
Number/  
Número de  
grupo  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Group Name/  
Nombre del  
grupo  
Rhythm name/  
Nombre del ritmo  
Rhythm name/  
Nombre del ritmo  
Nombre del  
Número de  
grupo  
grupo  
secuencial  
secuencial  
WORLD II  
INDIAN  
050  
037  
038  
039  
040  
041  
176  
177  
178  
179  
180  
PIANO MARCH 2  
STRIDE PIANO  
WALTZ 3  
WALTZ 4  
WALTZ 5  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
121  
122  
BHANGRA  
DADRA  
GARBA  
KEHARWA  
DANDIYA  
TEEN TAAL  
BHAJAN  
051  
052  
053  
054  
055  
056  
NOTE  
Sequential number rhythms 171 through 180 do not  
sound unless a chord is being played.  
CHINESE  
057  
123  
124  
125  
126  
127  
128  
129  
130  
131  
132  
133  
134  
135  
136  
GUANGDONG  
JIANGNAN  
BEIJING  
DONGBEIYANGGE  
JINGJU  
HUANGMEIXI  
QINQIANG  
YUJU  
YAOZU  
DAIZU  
MIAOZU  
MENGGU  
XINJIANG  
ZANGZU  
058  
059  
060  
061  
062  
063  
064  
065  
066  
067  
068  
069  
NOTA  
Los ritmos secuenciales números 171 al 180 no  
suenan a menos que se ejecute un acorde.  
070  
SOUTHEAST ASIAN  
071  
072  
137  
138  
KRONCONG  
DANGDUT  
JAPANESE  
073  
139  
ENKA  
BALLAD/PIANO RHYTHMS  
BALLAD  
001  
140  
141  
142  
143  
144  
145  
146  
147  
148  
149  
150  
151  
152  
153  
154  
155  
PIANO ROCK BALLAD  
90’S BALLAD  
002  
003  
004  
005  
006  
007  
008  
009  
010  
011  
012  
013  
014  
015  
016  
MODERN BALLAD  
ELECTRIC BALLAD  
SLOW BALLAD 1  
SLOW BALLAD 2  
R&B BALLAD  
16 BEAT BALLAD  
SOUL BALLAD  
POP BALLAD 1  
POP BALLAD 2  
PIANO WALTZ BALLAD  
90’S 6/8 BALLAD  
6/8 BALLAD 1  
6/8 BALLAD 2  
ROCK BALLAD  
VARIOUS  
017  
156  
157  
158  
159  
160  
CHRISTMAS SONG  
CHRISTMAS WALTZ  
SCREEN SWING  
SYMPHONY  
018  
019  
020  
021  
STR QUARTET  
PIANO RHYTHMS  
022  
023  
024  
025  
026  
027  
028  
029  
030  
031  
032  
033  
034  
035  
036  
161  
162  
163  
164  
165  
166  
167  
168  
169  
170  
171  
172  
173  
174  
175  
PIANO 8 BEAT  
PIANO BALLAD 1  
PIANO BALLAD 2  
EP BALLAD 1  
EP BALLAD 2  
BLUES BALLAD  
JAZZ COMBO 2  
JAZZ COMBO 3  
RAGTIME  
BOOGIE-WOOGIE  
PIANO ROCK & ROLL  
ARPEGGIO 1  
ARPEGGIO 2  
ARPEGGIO 3  
PIANO MARCH 1  
A-5  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Music Preset List/Lista de preajustes musicales  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre  
del grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Númerode  
grupo  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre  
del grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Númerode  
grupo  
75  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
secuencial  
Preset Name/  
Nombre de preajuste  
Preset Name/  
Nombre de preajuste  
secuencial  
A
75  
76  
77  
78  
79  
80  
81  
82  
83  
84  
85  
86  
87  
88  
89  
90  
Funky Clavi  
POPS  
1
76  
Earth Disco  
70’s Disco  
Disco Lady  
Staying  
1
Soft Pop  
77  
2
2
Winter Pop  
Oldies Pop  
Alpine Flora  
Gypsy  
78  
3
3
79  
4
4
80  
Upside  
5
5
81  
80’s Disco  
Give You Up  
Bb Girl  
6
6
Rain Pop  
Movie Waltz  
Blowin’ in  
Funky Rspct  
Love Pop  
Loco  
82  
7
7
83  
8
8
84  
Blv Disco  
Lady M  
9
9
85  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
ROCK  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
58  
59  
60  
61  
62  
63  
64  
65  
66  
67  
68  
69  
70  
71  
72  
73  
DANCE  
74  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
86  
Out Of My H  
Euro Pop  
Don’t Funk  
Trance  
87  
Rising Sun  
Believer  
88  
89  
Pop Ska  
90  
The Escape  
Weep Blues  
Sugar Pop  
JoyWorldPop  
My Life  
JAZZ  
91  
91  
92  
Wonderland  
My Swing  
Things  
92  
93  
93  
Ribbon  
94  
94  
Angel  
Blue Love  
Xmas Pop  
Close  
95  
95  
Time  
96  
96  
Leaf  
97  
97  
Blackbird  
Dolphin  
Roses  
Going On  
70’s Pop  
98  
98  
99  
99  
West Coast  
Bossa Pop  
Radio Pop  
Crazy Roll  
Ivory Pop  
UK Pop  
100  
101  
102  
103  
104  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
110  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
100  
101  
102  
103  
104  
105  
106  
107  
108  
109  
110  
111  
112  
113  
114  
115  
116  
117  
118  
119  
120  
Steps  
RhythmChange  
Swing Mood  
The Mood  
Brown Jug  
Lullaby  
Breath You  
A Feeling  
Calling  
Night  
Street  
Doll  
Take On  
Someday  
Mode Jazz  
Train  
The World  
PlaceOnEarth  
Mexican Pop  
Guitar Pop  
W Up  
Tea Time  
Jazz Waltz  
Home  
Sign  
Blues in F  
Blues in Bb  
Blues in C  
II-V  
Wonder  
Hips D Lie  
Say Right  
MdrnPopRock  
II-V-I  
Minor Blues  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
58  
59  
60  
61  
62  
63  
64  
65  
66  
67  
68  
69  
70  
71  
72  
73  
Rock Clock  
Johnny  
B
CLASSIC  
1
Heartache  
EP R&R  
121  
122  
123  
124  
125  
126  
127  
128  
129  
130  
131  
132  
133  
134  
135  
136  
137  
138  
139  
140  
141  
142  
143  
144  
145  
146  
147  
148  
149  
Canon  
2
Air G String  
Je Te Veux  
Adagio  
Pop R&B  
3
60’s Rock 1  
60’s Rock 2  
60’s Rock 3  
60’s Rock 4  
60’s Rock 5  
Get Rock  
Honky Rock  
Wild Rock  
Alligator  
4
5
Spring  
6
Ave Maria  
JesusBleibet  
Symphony 25  
Symphony 40  
HungriaDance  
Eine Kleine  
Pathetique  
Moonlight  
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
The Tiger  
Pop Rock  
16Bt Rosa  
Heat Up  
PstlSymphony  
Ode To Joy  
Le Cygne  
Hard Rock  
Grunge Rock  
Latin Rock  
Hanging By  
R&R  
Swan Lake  
Valse Fleurs  
Habanera  
Nocturne  
Etude  
Piano R&R  
Blues  
FrenchCancan  
FantaisieImp  
Humoresque  
Pavane  
8 Bars Blues  
Riff Rock 1  
Riff Rock 2  
Riff Rock 3  
Hope & Glory  
Moldau  
FromNewWorld  
Reverie  
74  
Disco Freak  
A-6  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre  
del grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Númerode  
grupo  
30  
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
secuencial  
150  
Group  
Name/  
Nombre  
del grupo  
Group  
Number/  
Númerode  
grupo  
7
Sequential  
Number/  
Número  
secuencial  
227  
Preset Name/  
Nombre de preajuste  
Preset Name/  
Nombre de preajuste  
Nutcracker  
Xmas Ballad  
31  
151  
Liebestraume  
Gymnopedies  
Jupiter  
8
228  
Love Me  
32  
152  
9
229  
Oldies Bld 1  
Oldies Bld 2  
Oldies Bld 3  
Oldies Bld 4  
E World  
33  
153  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
58  
59  
60  
61  
62  
63  
64  
65  
66  
67  
68  
JAZZ BALLAD  
69  
70  
71  
72  
73  
74  
75  
76  
77  
78  
79  
80  
230  
34  
154  
Entertainer  
MapleLeafRag  
231  
35  
155  
232  
TRAD  
36  
233  
156  
157  
158  
159  
160  
161  
162  
163  
164  
165  
166  
167  
168  
169  
170  
171  
172  
173  
174  
175  
176  
177  
178  
179  
180  
Michael Row  
GrndpasClock  
Troika  
234  
Tears  
37  
235  
Moon Waltz  
A’s Theme  
Paradise  
38  
236  
39  
AuldLangSyne  
Aloha Oe  
237  
40  
238  
60’s Ballad1  
60’s Ballad2  
Whiter Shade  
FrenchBallad  
Everywhere  
Wonderful  
70’s Ballad1  
70’s Ballad2  
My Song  
41  
O Sole Mio  
239  
42  
Furusato  
240  
43  
SzlaDziweczk  
Battle Hymn  
Condor  
241  
44  
242  
45  
243  
46  
ScarboroFair  
Danny Boy  
244  
47  
245  
48  
Greensleeves  
Annie Laurie  
AmazingGrace  
WeWishU Xmas  
Silent Night  
Joy To World  
YankeeDoodle  
Clarnt Polka  
TaRaRaBoom  
Double Eagle  
Blauen Donau  
Yellow Rose  
BeautDreamer  
246  
49  
247  
Bridge  
50  
248  
Img Ballad  
Without  
51  
249  
52  
250  
Not In Love  
Soft Ballad  
We Were  
53  
251  
54  
252  
55  
253  
Minor Ballad  
Pop Ballad 1  
Pop Ballad 2  
PianoBallad1  
PianoBallad2  
Musical Bld  
R Ballad  
56  
254  
57  
255  
58  
256  
59  
257  
60  
258  
LATIN  
61  
259  
181  
182  
183  
184  
185  
186  
187  
188  
189  
190  
191  
192  
193  
194  
195  
196  
197  
198  
199  
200  
201  
202  
203  
204  
205  
206  
207  
208  
209  
210  
Moon Bossa  
Your Smile  
Rio  
260  
Always Mind  
Endless  
62  
261  
63  
262  
80’s Ballad1  
80’s Ballad2  
80’s Ballad3  
80’s Ballad4  
Friends For  
Rock Ballad  
Eternal  
64  
Bossa Blue  
One Note  
Wave Bossa  
Out Of Tune  
Quiet Star  
Insentive  
Brzl Samba  
Orpheus  
263  
65  
264  
66  
265  
67  
266  
68  
267  
69  
268  
70  
269  
Everything  
Save Best  
Of The Road  
I Always  
71  
270  
72  
Tico-Tico  
Beguine  
271  
73  
272  
74  
Amapola  
La Paloma  
Banana Boat  
Peanut  
273  
New World  
Vision  
75  
274  
76  
275  
I Can Fly  
77  
276  
Wind Ballad  
Love To You  
My Ballad  
Beautiful  
78  
Coffee  
277  
79  
Jamaica  
278  
80  
MoreBeguine  
The No.5  
Everyday  
Mucho  
279  
81  
280  
Scrubs  
82  
281  
Falling  
83  
282  
BlngTogether  
B Day  
84  
El Tango  
El Choclo  
Sheriff  
283  
85  
284  
Rap Ballad  
Dance Ballad  
MdrnRock Bld  
Slow Ballad  
Kiss Rose  
86  
285  
87  
No Woman  
Can’t Help  
Livin’  
286  
88  
287  
89  
288  
90  
Whenever  
COUNTRY  
91  
289  
290  
291  
292  
293  
294  
295  
296  
297  
298  
299  
300  
Summer  
New York  
B & S  
211  
212  
213  
214  
215  
216  
217  
218  
219  
220  
This Land  
My Sunshine  
Walk Line  
Home Roads  
A Friend  
92  
93  
L Alone  
Foggy  
94  
95  
Moon Swing  
Foolish  
96  
Cowboy  
97  
Still One  
Valentine  
Midnight  
Journey  
Star  
98  
Breath  
99  
CountryWaltz  
He Cheats  
100  
C
Starlight  
BALLAD  
1
2
3
4
5
6
221  
222  
223  
224  
225  
226  
Love Ballad  
R&B Ballad  
Soul Ballad  
Blues Ballad  
MovieBallad1  
MovieBallad2  
A-7  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Fingered 3, Full Range Chords/  
Acordes Fingered 3, Full Range  
Fingering Guide/  
Guía de digitación  
In addition to the chords that can be fingered with  
Fingered 1 and Fingered 2, the following chords also  
are recognized.  
Fingered 1, Fingered 2 Chords/  
Acordes Fingered 1, Fingered 2  
Además de los acordes que se pueden digitar con  
Fingered 1 y Fingered 2, también se pueden reconocer  
los siguientes acordes.  
C
#
b
b
#
C
D
C
E
C
F
C
G
C
A
B
B
C
C m Dm Fm  
Cm  
Cdim  
C
C
C
C
C
C
b
b
b
Gm Am B m Ddim A 7 F7 Fm7 Gm7 A add9  
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
Caug *3  
NOTE  
Csus4 *3  
With Fingered 3, the lowest note fingered is  
interpreted as the base note. Inverted forms are not  
supported.  
Csus2 *3  
C7  
With Full Range Chord, when the lowest fingered is  
a certain distance from the neighboring note, the  
chord is interpreted as a fraction chord.  
Unlike Fingered 1, 2, and 3, Full Range Chord  
requires pressing of at least three keys to form a  
chord.  
Cm7 *3  
CM7  
Cm7b5 *3  
NOTA  
Con Fingered 3, la nota más baja digitada se  
interpreta como nota base. No se pueden usar  
formas invertidas.  
C7b5 *3  
Con Full Range Chord, cuando la nota digitada más  
baja se encuentre a cierta distancia de la nota  
adyacente, el acorde se interpreta como un acorde  
bitonal.  
C7sus4  
Cadd9  
A diferencia de Fingered 1, 2, y 3, Full Range Chord  
requiere la pulsación de tres teclas como mínimo  
para formar un acorde.  
Cmadd9  
CmM7  
Cdim7 *3  
C69 *3  
C6 *1 *3  
Cm6 *2 *3  
*1With Fingered 2, interpreted as Am7.  
b
*2With Fingered 2, interpreted as Am7 5.  
*3Inverted form not supported in some cases.  
*1Con Fingered 2, se interpreta como Am7.  
b
*2Con Fingered 2, se interpreta como Am7 5.  
*3En algunos casos no se puede usar de forma  
invertida.  
A-8  
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Appendix/Apéndice  
Chord Example List/Lista de ejemplos de acordes  
A-9  
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Model PX-330  
Version : 1.0  
MIDI Implementation Chart  
Function  
Transmitted  
Recognized  
Remarks  
Basic  
Channel  
Default  
Changed  
1 - 16  
1 - 16  
1 - 16  
1 - 16  
Default  
Messages  
Altered  
Mode 3  
X
Mode 3  
X
Mode  
Note  
Number  
0 - 127  
0 - 127  
*
True voice  
0 - 127 1  
** : no relation  
** : sin relación  
Note ON  
Note OFF  
O
9nH v = 1 - 127  
O
9nH v = 1 - 127  
Velocity  
**  
X
8nH v = 64  
X
9nH v = 0, 8nH v =  
After  
Touch  
Key’s  
Ch’s  
X
X
X
O
Pitch Bender  
O
O
Bank select  
0,32  
1
O
X
X
O
O
X
X
X
X
X
X
O
X
O
O
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
Modulation  
Portamento Time  
Data entry LSB, MSB  
5
*2  
6, 38  
7
Volume  
Pan  
Expression  
10  
11  
*2  
DSP Parameter0  
16  
*2  
DSP Parameter1  
17  
*2  
DSP Parameter2  
18  
*2  
DSP Parameter3  
19  
Damper  
64  
Portamento Switch  
Sostenuto  
65  
Control  
Change  
66  
Soft pedal  
67  
Vibrato rate  
Vibrato depth  
Vibrato delay  
76  
77  
78  
*2  
DSP Parameter4  
80  
*2  
DSP Parameter5  
81  
*2  
DSP Parameter6  
82  
*2  
DSP Parameter7  
83  
Portamento Control  
Reverb send  
84  
91  
Chorus send  
93  
*2  
RPN LSB, MSB  
100, 101  
120  
121  
All sound off  
Reset all controller  
Program  
Change  
O
O
O
0 - 127  
:True #  
*2  
System Exclusive  
O
System  
Common  
: Song Pos  
: Song Sel  
: Tune  
X
X
X
X
X
X
System  
Real Time  
: Clock  
: Commands  
O
O
X
X
Aux  
: Local ON/OFF  
: All notes OFF  
: Active Sense  
: Reset  
X
O
X
X
X
O
O
X
Messages  
*1 : Depends on tone  
Remarks  
*1 : Depende del tono  
Mode 1 : OMNI ON, POLY  
Mode 3 : OMNI OFF, POLY  
Mode 2 : OMNI ON, MONO  
Mode 4 : OMNI OFF, MONO  
O :Yes  
X : No  
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This recycle mark indicates that the packaging conforms to  
the environmental protection legislation in Germany.  
Esta marca de reciclaje indica que el empaquetado se  
ajusta a la legislación de protección ambiental en Alemania.  
C
MA0906-A Printed in China  
PX330ES1A  
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