Sadly I've already bought it so I'm just checking whether it's good or decent or bad
Hi all,
I'm being offered a three year old Yamaha P-125 for £300 ($380.00).
I am a beginner piano player and am starting my first lesson tomorrow (thrice a week).
Wanted to find out whether this would be a good first piano, whether this is a good price and whether I should be on the lookout for anything; in case it's damaged etc.
Complete noob to this, but seems like a good price. They are selling because they want to buy a 'Yamaha CK88 Digital Workstation'
Comes with a Sustain Pedal and X stand.
Videos
Some people say it is and, for exemple, Roland fp30x is better. Other people say the exact opposite. What do you think?
Hi all,
Planning on buying the wife a keyboard as she has been wanting to learn.
I know nothing about pianos so hoping to get some insight from the experts.
Firstly, is this a good choice for someone starting to learn?
Do i need to buy external speakers or is its in-built speakers good enough?
I keep reading about pedals - is this something that I would need to buy as well?
Any other factors i miss there?
Any help[ would be ppreciated.
Thanks
Beginner player in the market for his first piano, I’m trying to get a comparison of the value between these two pianos. I will use it for practicing at home and as music production midi input.
A Yamaha p225 is 1018 CAD total (tax included) brand new. No piano stores near me have it used. Checked it out in store and I liked the action on it.
A Yamaha p125 is around 750 ~ 800 CAD or so on facebook market used with a stand. Closest piano store to me that has it is 40 minutes away and I’d rather not make the trip if I don’t have to.
I have somewhere to put it already although the positioning is a bit awkward for my legs (I rented a Roland FP10 for a month to see if I’d like it and it worked well enough for me).
Is the p225 worth the 200 ~ or so price increases against the p125? I read and watched YouTube reviews and people are saying the CFX on the p225 is a huge upgrade over the p125, and that the sound on the 225 is clearer and stronger. However people are also saying a downside to the 225 is that the speakers are at the back instead of the top. I don’t have a strong enough ear to make a distinctions between the quality in a YouTube video, and all the videos recommend going in stores and checking out both (which I would like to avoid if I can). People list spec differences as well, but I’m not experienced enough to be able to gauge the value of the difference between the specs of the two pianos.
Would love some insight from anyone more experienced than me. Thanks
I have played on various different pianos and yamaha p-125 feels way heavier than any digital piano and grand piano I’ve played on. It just feels slow and it feels like it holds me back. When I trill on the p125 it feels very abnormal and it just doesn’t work. But when I do it on a grand it feels easier and lighter. Just me? Does anybody else have a p125 and feel the same way?
Hi everyone,
I am confused about these two. I have the opportunity of purchasing a used Yamaha P125.
Is the P125 already outdated? Should I just buy the P125a?
Whats the difference?
Thank you!
I'm looking for an inexpensive keyboard to practice on during nights. I'm playing stuff like Beethoven sonatas, Chopin etudes (also the 2nd scherzo), Bach partitas right now. I'm wondering if this would be a decent keyboard for that. I tried it a bit in the store and it seemed alright, but I didn't feel comfortable sitting there and playing that long. The FP30 and the Kawai in the same price range I didn't like at all personally. They sounded terrible and the action felt pretty off.
Hi all, I’ve been playing piano for about 3 years now. I practice at home on a Yamaha P125, but at my lessons with my piano teacher we use a grand piano. The difference in sound always throws me off - while I’ve enjoyed my P-125, is there any keyboards of similar quality where the sound is more akin to a grand piano?
It includes a piano style sustain pedal, X stand, and X bench. Is it worth it in 2022?
Google tells me that the only difference is - “the built-in audio interface isn’t present on the newer P125a, meaning USB can only send MIDI data but not audio”
Does this mean I cannot connect it to a speaker? I’m a complete novice at this and would greatly appreciate any advice you have! :)
keyboardquestion
When I play E3 on my piano it plays it really loudly even when I'm hitting softly, it's like it's really sensitive but I don't know how to stop it, I'll post a video of me playing part of clair de lune slowly to demonstrate. If anyone knows what's wrong please let me know
I read somewhere that the Yamaha p125 (and other digital pianos in the same price range) wasn't good enough to play something as quick as "la Campanella."
Let's say a person reaches the level of songs that requires high speeds; will the p 125 no longer be sufficient?
Hello everyone. Im complete newbie and thinking about buying my first digital piano. Prices of newer P145 that is a newer version of P45 is pretty much the same price as P125 ( now with P225 the new model, but that is too much money for me). What is better to buy? Im planing to try to learn to play blues, not really interested in classical music. Thanks to everyone that could help me in this struggle :)
Hey everyone, so I am about to purchase the P-125B (P-125 are P-125a are not available in my area) and I wanted to know if there's any difference at all between the P-125B and P-125. One of the things that sold me on the instrument was the ability to record AUDIO tracks directly on the smart pianist app, a feature which the P-125a lacks as it can only record MIDI files.
I wanted to be sure if the P-125B has this particular feature. Please let me know!
Hi! Like many others on this subreddit, I'm in the market for a new digital piano. I really like the Yamaha P-125 because it has almost all the features I'm looking for:
-
Under 30lbs (my arms are so weak)
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<$1200
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feels good to play
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easy to use interface for layering and two-track recording
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has a music rest and stand
However, it has only 24 voices. Those voices are all great, but I really enjoy playing with other voices like drums and random instruments, even if they're low quality. If there was a model that was identical to the P125, with a few extra voices crammed in, I would buy it in a heartbeat.
I know that I could use VSTs with the P125, but I would highly prefer to have everything in the piano already. I don't want to fiddle with wires, search for sounds, or spend more hours on a computer a day (because that number is already way too high).
I'm currently thinking the Casio Privia PX360 or PX560, but these are both quite old (8 years) and I haven't been able to try them in stores. Do y'all have any suggestions for alternatives? Or experience with the Privia models?
Other models I've considered:
Yamaha DGX-670, Roland FP-E50 - both have all the features I want, but they're too heavy for me.
Casio S3100 - Not a fan of the interface, prefer tactile buttons
Roland RD-88 - no music rest or piano stand
Thank you!
Need help choosing between the two. From the research I've done, FP-10 wins out of replicating the feel of an acoustic piano, and the P125 wins out on sound. I'm never going to play chamber music, it's more to learn + practice in my room during quarantine. If I ever were to play for anybody it would be a recording. There is barely any price difference between the two options locally (FP-10 = 760, P125 = 850) so that isn't a worry. Listening to the FP-30 vs the P125 I preferred the sound of the FP-30 (it's like 1.2k here though...) if that changes anything. But sound (I mean more volume here) isn't really something I care for, I just want the best piano for the best price that'll last the longest.
Hi everyone,
Combed through reviews/ past posts... and it sounds like Roland FP30X might be worth the investment. I considered the Kawai but I think that might be a smidge too much for me right now.
Guitar Center has the Yamaha P125AB for $599.99 as part of their sale right now vs Roland FP30X for 799.99 (no sale)
New piano player - picked it up about 1.5 months ago (had some music background from playing violin in MS/HS). I think after the initial 2 month trial and I still find myself playing it at least 20-30 min each day... it's a hobby that I'm sticking with.
I have a 61 key unweighted Yamaha NP-12. Getting to the point in practice and lessons where unweighted keys are not ideal... mistake #1, which brought me back to the market for an 88 key weighted one. I do plan on moving later this year too if that affects anything.
I tried both in person. Saw both pros and cons. Speakers, interface, and key action felt better on Yamaha.
But Roland keys felt a bit nicer, and sound was better. I know also that I/O usb here while Yamaha A/B only goes one way. I'm not sure if I'll ever use USB tbh but maybe I might down the line?
I think I just need one last final debate/ question out into the Redditverse of Yamaha 125 and Roland FP30X owners.
Is it worth the extra $200 jump? Anything else to look out for?
Appreciate any new/ additional insight!