The man behind that is Joseph Saltsman, and he has a website http://www.uniformkeyboardsystem.com/
http://www.youtube.com/user/31416erre#p/a/u/0/dGUD58gp6Fk
The palyer's first name is Pierre, but I don't know his name.
Dominique W.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Pierre Therrien
Date: Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 6:54 AM
Subject: 6-6 keyboard
To: William CroftHello William,You're right, I don't check my Youtube mail often ;-)... Sorry about the delay in answering your email. The midi controller I modified was a Roland PC-300. I've attached a photo of the instrument.I ordered the 'D' and 'black' keys from the local distributor of Roland parts and components. The conversion can be done in just a few minutes; the time it takes to unscrew the case, take out the original keys, and put the new ones in.The diykeyboard site looks like an interesting project. I've applied for membership.Best regardsπerre :-)
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----- Original Message -----From: PJP...@aol.com
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----- Original Message -----From: PJP...@aol.comSent: Tuesday, September 20, 2011 8:07 PMSubject: Re: [diykeyboard] Re: Symmetrical piano
I made one using a cheap used casio 61 key - you might need to get extra (replacement keys) - casio was easy and not to expensive to get extra keys from.PaulPb
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Hi Paul Pb,
You wrote : > My experience is that the 6-6 wasn't easier than the 7-5 - my main interest was the extra space I could reach and I discovered the many options one piece of music or exercise can be played so in a way it’s easier and in another more difficult...
What do you mean by that?
Maybe you remember I’ve once explained in detail, in a conversation with Paul Vandervoort on the MNP forum, why I was disappointed with the Chromatone and why I preferred the two-row keyboard. See attached file.
I can see that you have both a Janko and a two row keyboard. I suppose you have some experience with both. Could you comment the difference from your point of view? And were you previously trained on piano? Dominique
----- Origi
nal Message -----
From: PJP...@aol.comSent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 2:55 PMSubject: Re: [diykeyboard] Re: Symmetrical piano
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Could we see a photo of the modified roland keyboard ? were the extra D and black keys expensive?PaulPb
----- Original Message -----From: PJP...@aol.comSent: Sunday, September 25, 2011 9:59 PMSubject: Re: [diykeyboard] Re: Symmetrical piano
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Did your pictures got lost or maybe you forgot to attach them ?
Dominique
----- Original Message -----
From: "Pierre Therrien" <pier...@ono.com>
To: "diykeyboard" <diyke...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2011 11:30 AM
Subject: [diykeyboard] Re: Symmetrical piano
Hi everyone,
I tried to reply via email, but it didn't work, so I'll post it here,
without the photos (I don't know if attachments are supported):
Thanks William for directing the message to my direct email address.
I�ve read the various messages in the thread.
I�ve been interested in alternative keyboards for a number of years
now. I started on guitar, tuning in fourths - EADGCF instead of the
usual EADGBE tuning - so that the fretboard would be �symmetrical�. I
transformed an acoustic piano in the mid 1990s with a couple of
friends. Unfortunately, it turned out that the instrument got out of
tune very quickly and we had to tune it almost every time we wanted to
play on it. It has been collecting dust in someone�s living room ever
since.
A few years ago, I regained interest in the concept and decided to
modify a portable keyboard � a Roland PC-180A. I made new white keys
by gluing a methacrylate cover on top of the existing keys. I later
modified a Roland PC-300A (the same keyboard with USB connection) with
keys I ordered from the manufacturer.
After playing for about a year with the Roland, I wanted a keyboard
that had the same feel as a real piano, or something close to it. As
William mentions, the Roland is a minimalist controller and feels more
like a toy.
I came across Harald Rieder�s web page (http://mitglied.multimania.de/
Rieder/) and he kindly gave me the information on how he had
transformed his instruments, and most importantly, that he had used D
keys to do so. So yes, it�s all about the D key, the only symmetrical
white key on a conventional keyboard.
After convincing a few friends to let me dismantle their instruments,
I found that it was possible to transform the Kurzweil, which is
equipped with a Fatar keyboard. The most difficult part was modifying
the metal frame under the keybed.
I�m very happy with the instrument. Apart from the symmetrical layout,
I believe that one of the main advantages of my two-row 6-6 keyboard
is the space between the white keys. On a conventional keyboard, the
keys are 22mm wide. On mine, there is a 5mm gap between every white
key, which means you have an extra 10mm � 5mm on each side. Also, you
don�t have to stretch more to play the same intervals as on a
conventional keyboard � in fact, you have that extra space for large
intervals � it�s quite easy to play 9ths and 10ths. Another thing I
really like about it is the weighted feel of the keys.
I would love to try a Janko keyboard. Unfortunately, they�re not easy
to find. However, I�ve always thought that the keys seem rather small.
I may be wrong. That�s one of the things which I don�t like about the
Chromatone (I may be wrong again, I�ve never played one either) � the
keys look really small and flimsy. Also, I wonder how you can find
your way around, as there doesn�t seem to be any �reference� key. I
have two coloured keys on mine � the red key is A, and the green one
is Eb.
I recently modified another small keyboard using a different
procedure. I cut the front part of all the white keys and glued them
back to convert them into D keys. I wanted a better small keyboard to
play synth sounds without having to do a keyboard split on the
Kurzweil. The only minor disadvantage is the joint between the narrow
part and the wide part.
I�m attaching a few pictures.
----- Original Message -----From: PierreSent: Wednesday, September 28, 2011 10:29 AMSubject: Re: [diykeyboard] Re: Symmetrical piano
Roland PC-180 with methacrylate keys
Roland PC-300 with factory keys
Kurzweil SP88
Evolution MK-249
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