Korg is among the big names which have shown tremendous capabilities of producing world-class equipment such as the Korg LP 380.Įstablished in 1963, Korg went on to gain trust and popularity among musicians due to the works it released and is still releasing. It’s perfect for a school, church, or performing arts centre where its simplicity is its greatest asset.In the music industry, there are plenty of popular brands known for producing high-quality musical instruments. If you’d rather quality than quantity, especially when it comes to piano sounds, the D1 is your pick. If you’re after hundreds of sounds and built-in drum machines, go buy a keyboard from JB Hi-Fi. You even get three levels of keybed sensitivity, selectable via the Touch button. For those wanting a top-end digital piano playing experience, then Korg’s RH3 keybed will deliver it for a keen price. Choose between three amounts of each by pressing the +/- buttons while holding the Touch/Brilliance/Reverb/Chorus button simultaneously.įor under a grand, the Korg D1 targets a niche and hits it hard. You can add Reverb and/or Chorus to each sound, while the Brilliance setting adds or subtracts sparkle to the voice in rather large increments. You can mix ’n’ match sounds from different banks by selecting each sound’s bank in Single mode, before layering voices. Dual voicings can be created simply by pressing two voices at the same time. They’re warm and rich and feel just right under your fingers. Of all the sounds on the D1, I found the piano and Rhodes most inspiring and soon lost myself in them. When playing a keyboard, I figure it’s a good sign when the experience makes your brain’s creative hemisphere kick in and your critical mode switch off. I quite enjoyed the guitar sound and would’ve happily done away with one of the vibes voices for a second guitar option. I thought the Choir voices were painfully synthetic and underwhelming, but then again it’s hard to like any built-in choir sound that doesn’t come in a sample library. Three nice jazz/rock organ tones live in Organ 1 while Organ 2 covers rich church organs. EP1 and EP2 contain Rhodes, Wurli and DX7-type sounds (the latter two of which have a rather noisy hammer-off sound that’s noticeable when playing gently). Korg has been in the digital piano biz for yonks so it’s no surprise the six piano voices are stunning, covering a couple of lush grands and stringy uprights to a boot-scootin’ honky tonk. It’s a best-of package for simple stage setups. The D1 has 30 sounds on offer, navigated via three banks and two rows of five buttons. On the front is a 3.5mm headphone output, and you get a music rest and nice little sustain pedal thrown in. Even the I/O connections on the rear are pared back, with connections for stereo line outputs, sustain, two five-pin MIDI ports and DC power input. The D1 is aesthetically very minimal, with controls bunched into the left corner.
KORG TINY PIANO DIGITAL MOD
Pitch and mod wheels are also nowhere to be found, though their absence means the keyboard may just fit the width of your car boot. Thankfully, the D1 doesn’t have the multi-colour light-up logo from the Grandstage.
KORG TINY PIANO DIGITAL PLUS
The plus side is it takes a very heavy-handed player to make it budge.
KORG TINY PIANO DIGITAL FULL
Though it’s small and narrow, the Korg D1 feels like it’s stuffed full of shot-put balls - typical of all Korg digital pianos.
The new sub-$1k Korg D1 digital piano represents an affordable way of getting a similar experience - specifically, the same progressively-weighted RH-3 keybed - with a smattering of voices that sound anything but entry-level.
We recently reviewed Korg’s Grandstage flagship digital piano, which puts the finest Korg tones under an impeccably authentic keybed to make for a thoroughly satisfying piano experience - and you’d expect no less for nearly $4k.