The new Yamaha DGX620 is Yamaha's first 88-key weighted action portable keyboard. The DGX 620 has piano style keys, ultra-real feel and more. The Yamaha DGX-620 has all of the best sounds available at the push of one button, and recording performances is simple to do with the built-in recorder. The Yamaha DGX 620 also features the Yamaha Education Suite and USB connectivity. Other features include a high resolution Live grand piano sample, wooden stand, sustain pedal and adapter.
Yamaha introduce an all new line of DGX Series of Digital Portable Keyboards. Designed for the consumer electronics market, the DGX 220, DGX520 and DGX620 are amazing achievements in design, features, performance and value in all-inclusive electronic musical instruments. The DGX Series provide the look and sound of an acoustic piano and are ideal alternatives to a large instrument for customers with space or cost limitations. With the Yamaha DGX Series, not only do users get a high quality, moderately-priced digital piano, but also a diverse feature set typically found on high-end professional synthesizer products.
Full sized piano-style keys are the hallmark of the DGX Portable Grands. Model DGX620 includes Graded Hammer/Touch Sensitive action that mimics the weight and feel of an acoustic grand. More than 400 Instrument Voices (including XGlite voices and 12 Drum/Percussion/SFX kits) and onboard effects (Chorus, Delay, Reverb, EQ) produce stunningly realistic sounds. With the One Touch Portable Grand function, the single press of one button creates the incredible realism of a stereo grand piano. Add expression to your playing by using the pitch bend wheel, or by adding a sustain pedal.
The DGX Series can be enjoyed through the dynamic stereo speakers, or through the privacy of headphones. Recording original music is fast and easy with the 5-song / 6-track capacity on-board sequencer. Models DGX520 and DGX620 also include Lyric and Scoring viewing capability, giving users the option to simply press the Score button and see the notation on the large bitmapped LCD display—even for the songs they`ve recorded themselves.