2017-01-31

REVIEW - Roland FP90 Digital Piano - Recommended - The all new FP90 ($1799US internet discount price - not including optional triple pedal unit and furniture stand) replaces the previous popular FP80 for the Roland company and this model has been completely redesigned in almost every way from previous models. Sometimes a company will just do a slight "refresh" on their new model but in this case just about everything is new in the FP90 (available in either satin black or white) and I like most of those changes very much. The Roland company is well known for their vast array of music products for stage, home, educational market, and many people who have never played piano to people who are advanced pianists play Roland digital pianos. The Roland company has its international headquarters based in japan and have been making musical instruments and music products for many, many years and in fact I personally own some Roland professional music gear. So when it comes to quality engineering and durability, Roland is at the top with the best and I like them very much.

The FP90 is a unique portable digital piano for Roland because it uses Roland's new top of the line key action found in their top of the line home digital pianos along with a new proprietary piano sound chip and brand new functions all going through the most powerful FP internal speaker system ever (this baby can get LOUD). I have played this new model many times and have grown to understand it very well and have enjoyed the experience. The FP90 is really all about "playing the piano" and even though it has other features and functions, in my opinion a person would want to own this piano to focus on piano playing as a performance instrument, with the other functions and features being secondary to that reason. So even though the FP90 does other things...they should only be considered important if you like what this instrument does as a piano.

So what are the things that really makes the new FP90 unique? For starters it uses a brand new technology for creating the piano sound which is called "Physical Modeling." Normally in all prior FP models as well as in the other top brands in this price range, the acoustic piano sound is created using real acoustic grand pianos with microphones near them to record the real piano sound from different angles and positions in the real piano and then that stereo sound recording is put into the digital piano. When you play that digital piano then what you hear is the sound that came from the real acoustic grand piano. But that process has its limitations because that original piano sound is reproduced using "sample loops" rather than the sound be a complete linear recreation that starts and ends as one complete uninterrupted sound. Sampling or recording the real piano sound means you have to use a slice of the sound that may be heard for a number of seconds until that slice repeats itself automatically and so on. The key to making a great piano "sample" is how that sound slice decays, resonates, and responds to dynamics over over a period of time before it starts all over again and so that you don't hear or notice the "loop point" where the sample starts over again.

Some of the top digital pianos companies that use piano sampling such as Kawai, do a very impressive job in covering up or creating a sound sample that sonically sounds like there is no loop point to most ears, only there really is. However, if you play a note and you allow the piano sound to sustain long enough over time without playing another note, you may be able to hear the sample loop point and the way it behaves including all the dynamics and resonances...rather than an organic linear sound with organic overtones found in natural acoustic pianos that have no sample "loops." To solve this sample loop point issue, Roland is using mathematical algorithms to create acoustic piano sounds in the "virtual world" without the use of microphones and recorded samples. Roland has tried to reconstruct what an actual professional sounding acoustic grand piano really sounds like and then to try to reproduce that sound "virtually" so that the piano sound can have the natural qualities of real acoustic pianos without the potential downsides of sampled piano technology. The question is...has Roland been able to do that...to make their FP90 sound like a real piano and make it sound even better than any of their competition who still use (they all do) the recording/sampling process? In my opinion the answer is...yes and no!

Without going into great detail about the entire process of "physical modeling" and how that process all works, it is important to say that a natural acoustic piano sound is very complex. With approximately 230 individual strings of different lengths, different diameters, and materials being struck by felt hammers with different thicknesses of felt, and the strings vibrating individually and together through a physical wood soundboard in the piano. The sampling process does not have to worry about all that...it just uses microphones positioned in different areas around the grand piano recording the sounds with the end result...the actual acoustic piano sound itself being recorded one note at a time over 88 keys. But physical modeling has to recreate all that stuff from scratch without the actual piano being recorded as sampled sounds...but instead just mathematical algorithms as I mentioned before. The piano sound details/elements in the FP90 including stereo tonal dynamics, tonal color,natural volume changes including a huge dynamic volume and tonal range, string vibrations, damper sustain duration, and volume over time (during note duration staccato & legato) and with note mixing is extremely impressive. At first glance (listening) you would think what you are hearing is a real grand piano with all of its nuances whether playing very lightly or with lots of power. That's how I felt about it, and playing the FP90 was a unique piano-like experience and is quite enjoyable overall. It's much more realistic than the previous FP80 model in just about every way, in my opinion.

However, there are some downsides to this new technology which was particularly evident to me. A few of the notes in the upper octaves had a plunky, muted sound to them that was very unnatural as compared to a real acoustic piano and when these notes were played individually I could really hear these anomalies. Fortunately these anomalies can be mostly corrected with Roland's "Piano Designer" editing function which allows the user to edit the piano sound by individual notes and the sound character of each note. I was able to get rid of most of the anomalies like the plunky, muted tone of the notes in question. However if you just play the piano from its normal factory settings, in my opinion these specific notes just don't sound real at all and in fact sound quite digital. Another anomaly that I found to be irritating from time to time is what the piano sound does when sustaining multiple notes at the same time within a musical passage or chord. Sometimes the sustained chord sound came out sounding like it was just too much, too big, and just overdone which not as much clarity as I would have liked. This partly has to do with the fact that the FP90 pedaling damper/sustain piano note volume & time is substantially longer than ever before including more than the other name brands in this way.  This may sound like it should be a good thing and it mostly is, but this piano sustain tone was at times a bit fatiguing to my ears if I played for longer periods of time using longer sustained notes and chords. Good, long piano sustain is one thing, but having it come out naturally and organically is another. I talk more about this below with regard to pedaling.

The key action construction has been greatly upgraded over previous models with wood materials being used in the keys which Roland calls their new hybrid PHA50 triple sensor hammer (graded weighted) key action. This key action tries to replicate the subtle smooth movements of a real piano and Roland has definitely done a great job in that way (although it is certainly not perfect), getting closer to the real thing than ever before. Roland uses real wood side slats attached to the plastic keys to give the key more support and more of an organic look and response than on previous models, as well as increasing the more natural behavior of the keys as they move. One thing for sure, this new PHA50 hybrid key action is definitely the best key action that Roland has ever had in a portable digital piano and not only do the keys move in a fairly natural way, the keys (their movement) themselves are much quieter than on their prior models and perhaps the quietest key action in it class. There is still some ambient key noise when the keys move but that is normal and key noise used to be a big problem with Roland key actions...but not any more. They really did an outstanding job improving the key action and the FP90 feels very comfortable to play. The action still has the 3 key sensors for better repetition recognition for sensing key repetition especially when playing at a faster rate. The escapement feature is still part of the Roland key action as it was in it as previous models. This key action escapement simulation simulates what a grand piano key action feels like when you press the keys down very lightly. There is a slight hesitation or notch about half-way down when pressing the keys. This is a nice feature, although a somewhat too subtle compared to the real thing. Since this escapement simulation is not the real thing, it is not absolutely necessary to have in a digital piano key action in my opinion, but it does add a touch of realism to the piano playing experience in this price range nevertheless.

The key tops still have Roland's proprietary synthetic ebony and ivory keytops which feel very good and they try to simulate the real ivory and ebony material of acoustic piano keytops from many decades ago. I would say that the key movement (weight) of the keys when going down (static touch weight - amount of finger strength in your fingers needed to press the keys) as being medium...not too stiff and not too light...very responsive to play and keys move quickly when you want them to. So when it comes to key action in a portable piano in this price range (under $2000), my favorite key actions would be this new PHA50 as well as the Kawai RH3 counter-weight key technology used in their competitive model called the ES8. Both key actions play great with the Kawai seeming to be a bit firmer and the Roland a bit lighter to play on. Either way you just can't miss and the Roland PHA50 key action in the FP90 in my opinion leaves Yamaha and most other major brands in the dust as far as I am concerned. The other guys need to step up their game if they want to compete in this way.

OK, now onto the pedaling. The FP90 comes with a single damper sustain pedal called a DP10 which triggers the continuous detection for damper sustain so that no matter how little or far you press the pedal down, you will always get the proper amount of sustain like you would on a real acoustic piano. This effect is otherwise known as "half-damper" sustain on some other brands of digital pianos which is electronically adjustable on some models for the amounts of sustain that you want. Roland, by default, covers the full spectrum of pedal sustain when the single pedal is pressed down. The single pedal can also be switched over to an on/off pedal in case you want to use the pedal to control other features on the piano that does not require the continuous detection mode such as triggering a variety of functions from the function menu by pressing the pedal to trigger those functions instantly instead of manually going into the menu to get those same features. Also, Roland offers two optional 3-pedal products including a portable metal triple pedal unit for people who travel with their digital pianos and like to take it places and want more than just the standard included single damper pedal. The other pedal option is the furniture triple pedal bar that attaches to an optional furniture stand for the FP90 and makes the FP90 look more like a more formal home cabinet model. Either option is very nice and a great addition to the FP90 and how it operates.

Another important aspect of FP90 pedaling is the fact that the damper sustain and volume time (aka: decay time) is very long like a real piano when using the FP90 pedal, and is in fact the longest sustain decay/volume time of any piano in this price range that I have ever heard, and is very impressive. This is because of the Physical Modeling technology that Roland uses to achieve their new piano sounds, and the sustain volume and time that all 88 notes notes have are even and resonate over all 88 notes. This type of very long decay using the damper pedal can be very useful when trying to achieve a full resonating piano sound throughout the piano on all 88 keys when music is played in a legato smooth fashion. There are many digital pianos that have good sustain and decay time for their piano sounds, but not to the extent that Roland does in this FP90. It sounds like there are all kinds of strings vibrating and resounding at the same time in a linear fashion without hearing sample loops that you might hear on certain brands of digital pianos when those piano sounds are sustained for longer periods of time. The Roland FP90 is the clear winner here for damper/sustain time. Depending on how you use the damper pedal, this kind of damper sustain tone can be very useful in your playing, especially if you are an intermediate to advanced player.

However, with regard to pedal damper-sustain decay time and how all that has an affect on your music, just because Roland can create longer and bigger decay time and volume using their Physical Modeling Technology, that does not mean the sustained piano tone is accurate or natural. I found that when playing the FP90, depending on the type of music I was playing and how much damper-sustain pedal I was using, the tonal result had some strange anomalies in it with too much sustain along with some unnatural overtones coming out of the piano tone every now & then. Sometimes it sounded great and other times not so great depending on the music I was playing. It was almost like there was some digital interference within the sustained chord, but in fact I believe that Roland just threw in the proverbial "kitchen sink" when trying to duplicate what a real grand pianos sounds like whether being heard through the FP90 internal speakers or through stereo headphones. Sometimes I liked it and sometimes I did not and there was a lack of note clarity sometimes. It's a bit difficult to explain but since notes in a real grand piano are heard further away from the player because the strings are physically further away, and in an upright piano there is the cabinet structure enclosed over the strings and soundboard, a person's ears hear the sound differently than when hearing it through internal audio speakers in the FP90 which are right in front of you, or through headphones where the sound goes right into your head. In part it may be a matter of proximity to the ears. But no matter what the case, the pedal sustain and decay time & volume over time, is huge on the FP90, but not always musically satisfying or natural in my opinion and sometimes overwhelming and digital sounding.

One of the interesting things about the Physical Modeling technology in the FP90 is that there is not a limitation on the amount of Polyphony (piano sound processing power) that the piano has in it. Therefore the FP90 has unlimited polyphony whereas sampled piano digital pianos have a limit of 256-note polyphony. However in reality this seems to make little difference in the outcome of the sound to most people who play piano normally so I would not worry about it one way or the other. The FP90 has 4 separate piano sounds using the Physical Modeling technology and all the other instrument sounds are sampled and have a polyphony limitation of 384 note polyphony which is more than most people will ever use. It's like getting huge horse power in your vehicle's engine but you never go over 80 miles per hour speed and you don't accelerate super fast. One of the few reasons for needing a huge amount of Polyphony is because you do extensive multi-track recording on the piano using many instruments on many tracks, or you play many sounds layered together live in real time. In both cases the FP90 cannot do those things so all that polyphony would not apply to doing that.

The FP90 has 346 (non-physical modeled) instrument sounds which are sampled sounds (not physically modeled) plus 8 complete drum kits and a group of special effects. The quality of those instrument, percussion,, and special effect sounds is quite good on many of them and they include really nice string symphonies, organs of all types, brass, reeds, woodwinds, guitars, synths, electric pianos, and many more. The FP90 also allows a person the ability to layer any two sounds together for live play or splitting any two sounds with one sound on the left side of the keyboard and the other sound on the right side of the keyboard with an adjustable spit point so you can hear those sounds separately or together. Most digital pianos do that so it is not unusual but definitely important.

Along with being able to play all those sounds live, you can also playback General MIDI 16-track song files through the piano using a USB flashdrive loaded with the songs so that you can hear them being played and play and/or sing along with them. When it comes to playing back multi-track MIDI song files, the better the internal instrument sounds of the instrument and the more sounds that it has, the better the MIDI songs will sound when playing back. So when it comes to General MIDI song files, Roland is, without question, the best that there is...nobody comes close to the authenticity of the live instrument sounds in the songs and how they are mixed, the effects that are used on them, and the overall enjoyment you get from those songs. You name it and you can probably get just about any song you know as a MIDI song file so that you can learn that song by playing the piano parts live along with the full instrumentation of the song playing back. There are other brands and models that have MIDI song file playback such as Yamaha, Casio, and Kawai, but Roland is the King of General MIDI when it comes to realism of sounds and how they are mixed.

Now I am going to talk about the control panel of this new FP90 and changes that Roland has implemented in this model that were not on previous models. First of all it is obvious that the buttons and control sliders have changed significantly. The control panel consists of 25 nice sized round flush-mount buttons and 8 full length vertical sliders (5 volume, 3 EQ) mounted above the keys with a 2-line black & white LCD display screen in the middle of the control panel. It's a very clean, contemporary look and I like it and the buttons are absolutely flush with the control panel so you cannot feel the buttons sticking up above the panel. That's the first time I have seen something like this on a digital piano and the Roland design team has done an excellent job with the new design. The buttons are easy to press and make a slight click sound when you press them so you know that you have made the selection. Even the sliders are almost flush-mounted and rise just barely above the panel...very nice, sleek, and functional. Each button is backlit in a circle around the button with a soft, subdued white light, so the look of it is very nice. When a button/feature is selected then the button back-lite lights up to a bright white color. Just above each button is the name of the feature/function that each button would select.

Here's what I don't like about the control panel. Even thought the buttons are back-lit with a soft white light around the button, I would have much preferred another color such as red to identify a button that was pressed rather than just a brighter white color as it is now. It is more difficult to tell which button was pressed when it goes from a soft to a brighter white color among all those other backlit (soft white light) buttons...much too subtle for me. It is interesting to note that Roland does use a prominent red color (looks great) on a couple of buttons when that button is selected such as the record button or metronome button...but not on most of the other buttons when that button is selected. Also, when playing in a darkened room, it is easy to see the backlit buttons, but the names just above those buttons are not lit up at all and cannot be seen in a darkened room. In my opinion Roland should have had those names backlit as well especially since they are going through the effort of lighting up all the buttons all the time, because that would have been a big help to me.

The FP90 has song recording features and they are very useful and work well. There is a 1-track MIDI recorder and a 1-track audio wav file recorder. The recorder/player also can play back audio MP3 recordings but cannot record them. I am surprised the recorder is only 1-track and not two or more separate tracks that can be found on other digital pianos in this price range. However, Roland also has a 1/4" audio input for a microphone so that not only can you sing through the piano internal speaker system and have control over the mic volume, you can record your voice into the audio wav file recorder and play it back separately or along with the music you are playing, which is a very cool feature. You can also add vocal effects to your voice by switching on the FP90 effects such as reverb, compressor, doubler, and editing the amount you want each effect to have. You can use all the effects simultaneously or one or two at a time which gives you a lot of flexibility when it comes to singing live and/or recording your voice from the FP90. There is even a separate mic volume control to change volume in real time. The only negative aspect of using the mic is that the effects, which can be very useful to have, cannot be easily shut off unless you have the optional triple pedal unit. I did not see any way to disengage the effects with a hardware button or menu function from the control panel, so you have to go into the vocal effects menu and shut off the effects one at a time which is tedious and not in keeping with simplicity that I would have expected from Roland. As I mentioned, you can get on/off control of the effects but only with the optional triple pedal unit and assigning that function to one of the pedals.

Other functions in the FP90 which are fairly standard on most digital pianos is layering and splitting two different sounds together at the same time along with having real-time volume sliders for uper & lower parts on the control panel which adjusts the volume of both sounds independently. Other digital pianos in this price range can also control volume but in a different way through the internal menu. You can also save up to thirty "registration presets" into memory so that when you set up a certain combination of sounds, effects, layers, splits, etc, you can select that setting again from the registration memories. This can be very useful and allows you to retrieve your custom set-ups rather than trying to recreate them all over again.The FP90 offers a transpose button on the front panel which allows you to electronically change the key of the song in real time without any glitch or hesitation. If you are playing in one key and want to modulate to the next key up or down, you can easily do this from the front panel which is a great feature. Otherwise you can hold the transpose button and press any key on the keyboard which will then instantly allow you to play your song in that key. The transpose feature also can set the key separately for song playback in case you need it in a different key for a particular vocal range. The piano also has a very handy 4 band EQ system with three real time sliders on the front control panel for instant equalization of the over all sound coming out of the speakers or headphones. I really like this feature along with it being customizable, and a few other digital pianos have this very useful feature. Other digital pianos do have EQ but you need to access it through the menu or through an iPad app, so there are different ways to access EQ.

A feature I found very interesting was the 3D effect through stereo headphones. It's supposed to give you the impression the piano sound is all around you coming from different directions as opposed to directly into your ears. Roland calls it "an immersive sound experience" which gives you the feeling you're not actually wearing headphones at all...and that's really the point of this feature. In the FP90 this effect is called ambience and I tried it out and found that overall, it had a unique effect on the piano sound listening through stereo headphones and this 3D effect can be adjusted incrementally to fine tune it to your personal tastes. Personally after trying it out for quite awhile, I don't care for using it much as it somewhat distorts or changes the nature of the piano sound as far as I am concerned. But this is new technology in digital pianos and is a nice feature to have for some people, especially if you'll be using headphones often. This headphone 3D sound effect comes on automatically when powering up the piano but can also be adjusted or turned off completely depending if you want it or not (I turn it off). I will say that it is important to have good sounding higher quality headphones when trying to enjoy the piano privately regardless of whether you are using the #D effect or not. This is because lower quality, cheap headphones can make the piano sound tinny or muted and just not very pleasurable. If you are going to use headphones, make sure they are higher quality that reproduce the piano sound in an accurate way that translates the organic tones of the SuperNATURAL sound properly. Roland actually makes a variety of high quality stereo headphones so their headphones would be a good choice for that purpose.

Another part of the ambience button is to add reverb/echo to the overall piano sound, otherwise that piano sound can be a bit 'dry."  The ambience reverb effect is adjustable to give more or less reverb in incremental amounts. Unfortunately the reverb effect has no way of being disengaged by a button once the effect is applied to the piano sound. You have to manually go into the ambience menu from the ambience button and then reduce the amount to what Roland calls "plain." Again, the only negative aspect of using the reverb is that it cannot be easily shut off.and is tedious to use and switch off and not in keeping with simplicity that I would have expected from Roland. Maybe I am missing something but I just could not see a way of doing this and that's highly unusual in my opinion. Sometimes what appears to be a simpler control panel actually leaves out important controls that you may otherwise have had.

With regard to all of the fundamental parts of piano playing which I have just talked about including key action, piano sound, and pedaling. if all there was on this model was that you just turned on the power and started playing piano, that may be enough for some people. But for other people who enjoy "tweaking" and customizing the sound, feel, and overall piano playing response, Roland has included a huge amount of editing functions called "Piano Designer" just for that very purpose. In fact many of these functions are quite useful and allow people the opportunity of personalizing the playability of the piano along with the piano sound being set up to their particular tastes in a number of ways. These features are fairly easy to use although they may be "over-the-top" for some people, but that's OK because it's better to have them then to not have them, in my opinion. In regular acoustic pianos there are ways that a piano technician-tuner can personalize and customize the piano sound and key action but that can be an expensive process. In the Roland digital pianos this process is in the "digital domain" so it's right at your fingertips by the press of a couple of buttons and you use your ears, fingers, and pedal sound to determine what you like and don't like. Once you make a change to the overall piano sound you can then save it to a power-up memory. If you don't want those saved changes anymore you can then just reset the piano easily to the factory default settings. Some of the sound editing changes that you can do include Grand Piano Lid height position, Key Off Noise, Hammer Noise, Duplex Scale adjustment, Full Scale String Resonance, Damper Resonance, Key Off Resonance, Cabinet Resonance, Soundboard Type, Damper Noise, Single Note Tuning, Single Note Volume, Single Note Character, and 100 levels of key touch velocity (the way the keys respond to your touch). These functions and buttons are accessed through the control panel menu. In my opinion this is the most intuitive and usable placement of controls, display screen, and button placement on a digital portable piano, although Kawai has the same control panel placement on their competitive ES8 model as do a couple other brands. So when it comes to just playing the piano, you can do it the traditional way and simply power up the Roland piano and play, or you can edit and personalize the sound in just about any way you want to and see what you're doing in the nice LCD display screen in the center of the piano above the keyboard. Roland also has an app available for iPad in the app store called "Piano Designer" which can be used to make the changes you want in a more intuitive way using the iPad touch screen. It makes the process a whole lot easier and definitely more fun...I would recommend it.

Another new technology included in the new Roland FP90 piano is Bluetooth device connectivity. Bluetooth in digital pianos is relatively new and encompasses a number of separate features and some tablet apps do not have Bluetooth implemented yet. So when you hear the word "Bluetooth" in digital pianos, it doesn't mean they all do the same thing or can do everything associated with the Bluetooth technology. The Roland Bluetooth abilities include BT audio streaming so that you can hear the music from your Bluetooth capable external device (tablet, cell phone, computer, etc) such as iTunes come through the piano speaker system. Another Bluetooth feature is MIDI Streaming connectivity so that you can interact with Bluetooth capable apps or programs such as Garage Band for iPad which is a great MIDI music and recording app. It is very popular for music education and lots of fun to use. So not only will the app respond to your Bluetooth input from the piano as you play the keys, but you can also hear the music audio coming from that app through the piano speakers. A third Bluetooth function is "pedal Air page tuning. This BT feature allows you to open up sheet music on your tablet with apps that have this "Air Page Turn" feature so that you can download and read sheet music from your tablet and instantly turn the virtual pages by pressing a foot pedal on your piano exactly when you need to. One of those sheet music/page turning apps is called piaScore. With piaScore you can play thousands of songs from a free sheet music library through your tablet and turn the pages with Bluetooth page turner, and I previously mentioned. You can also import your own sheet music into the piaScore app so that you can have a custom library of songs that you can read directly from the app on your tablet device and be able to turn the sheet music pages with your Roland foot pedal (on the optional 3-pedal unit).

If you find some good iPad/Android music apps in the app store that respond to MIDI and audio but don't have Bluetooth implementation yet, you can still connect the Roland piano to your tablet with the use of a USB connecting cable along with an audio cable which will do the same thing as Bluetooth audio and MIDI with the exception that it will not be wireless. But for many people, that is just fine and the fact is you'll still be properly connected with your Roland piano. Last but not least, Roland has developed a new Piano Partner 2 Bluetooth app that allows wireless BT connection so that you can access the sheet music in the app to songs built into the FP90 as well as some educational note/sight reading digital flashcards in the app. Also, there are some interactive auto-accompaniment features generated by the app such as drum rhythm patterns and one-man band chord arrangement styles which you control by playing chords on the piano and hearing that accompaniment come through your piano speakers as you play melody and chords. It's fun and engaging and can make you sound better than you are:). The previous FP80 model had the interactive accompaniment functions built into the piano which I preferred because I like to have them whenever I want them rather than having to rely on getting my iPad up & running and being limited to getting the auto accompaniments in that way. But at least there is that option with the FP90 so that I can still have the accompaniments if I need or want them.

As I get get to towards the end of this review, it's time for me to talk about the internal speaker system. One thing is for sure, this baby can get loud, REALLY loud with 4 built-in speakers (2 larger speakers in their own internal speaker box and 2 smaller tweeters for more clarity) all going through 60 watts of power coming from 4 separate amplifiers. There is no lacking for volume and power in the FP90 and it can easily fill a large room or small venue and is louder than any other portable digital piano with a built-in sound system in this price range that I have ever heard. The bass response is also good due to the speaker system power. However, it would be very seldom that you would need to play this piano at 3/4 volume let alone full volume at home or in a small space...it's just too loud in the FP90 (I have tried it many times) and this is also true when listening through headphones. So just because a digital piano has huge power does not mean you need it or would use it in normal everyday piano playing in your home or studio. Pianos with 30-40 watts of power going through 2 speakers is generally more than enough for most people but if you need huge volume with more speakers for some reason, then the FP90 is certainly not lacking and will "blow your socks off.".

External device connectivity in the FP90 on the back panel is very good as it has most of the needed inputs and outputs that people would want including triple pedal soft, sostenuto, and sustain pedal input (with assignable pedals), dual 1/4" audio output, mic input with separate volume control, stereo min jack input for external audio devices to run through the piano speaker system, on/off switch for internal speakers, dual standard MIDI in/out connectors, USB output to host connector, and USB flashdrive input device connector to load, record, playback, and save songs. In the right front of the FP90 are two stereo headphone output connectors fro private practice. To be able to control many aspects of the FP90 functions, if you purchase the Roland portable triple pedal unit (as an example) then those pedals can trigger a big variety of functions including start/stop for external rhythms, metronome, song play, layer volume, overall volume of the piano, pitch bend, vibrato, mic effects (echo, doubling, etc), rotary fast/slow effect for Hammond type organ sounds, So when it comes to controlling various functions in real time which is especially useful to pro players, the FP90 does it especially well.

OK, so here are a couple things about the FP90 that I absolutely don't like and definitely gets in my way of personal playing enjoyment. The 1st and most important thing that bothers me is known as "all notes off" command. In the past, Roland FP models as well as all other previous Roland digital pianos and other brands of digital pianos that are currently made in this price range allow you to switch from one instrument sound to another when playing a song with no notes dropping out abruptly. This would include holding or sustaining an instrument sound with your damper sustain with the next sound still heard without the previous sound suddenly dropping out with interruption as you play the new sound. In other words having a smooth transition switching one sound to the next while playing or sustaining with damper pedal is important to some players who will want to play more than one sound during the song. The FP90 cannot do this and the notes simply shut off until you press one or more keys again. If you are layering two sounds simultaneously and you want to switch one of those instrument sounds to something different while you are playing, there will be a sudden drop out on the FP90 of the layered sound until the new layered sound is re-keyed and the next note is played. This situation is likely the result and limitation of the new Physical Modeling technology in the FP90 and there is nothing so far that Roland has been able to do about it and I know certain people who play for public performances, for church, for professional events, and people just playing recreationally at home who definitely do not like this and would hesitate to purchase a FP90 for this reason alone. However, if you play simply with regard to using sounds on the piano and will not be changing sounds during a song, then this limitation will not bother you because it would be irrelevant to your playing...but it is definitely worth mentioning and for me personally would be a hindrance in me owning a digital piano that did this.

The other thing I don't like about the FP90 when playing it (and not near as important as the 1st thing) is there are few separate digital effects that you can apply to non instrument sounds (electric pianos, harpsichords, organs, choirs, violins, flutes, guitars, synth sounds, etc) such as a variety of choruses, tremolo, phaser, compressor, delays, panning, dual effects, etc. The FP90 can apply a vibrato and pitch bend effect with is very cool, but only if you press a pedal on the optional triple pedal unit, but there are only 2 effects and they have nothing to do with what I am talking about here. People that use and like non-acoustic piano instruments (such as the ones I mentioned) like to be able to apply their own effects to those sounds to give them a more realistic tone, especially concerning vintage electric pianos and organs. Roland has a few of these effects in a limited way, but they are already preset for specific instrument sounds and cannot be changed or added to. In fact, on many of those instrument sounds, I don't particularly like the preset effect and would much prefer to have options, such as what the Kawai ES8 portable piano offers.

At the end of the day there is much to love about the new Roland FP90 including it's looks, it's powerful internal speaker system, its connectivity, and its features and functions. The new physical modeled acoustic pianos in the FP90 may sound perfect to some people but somewhat unnatural and digital sounding to other people...it just depends on your piano playing experience and your ears. The pedaling works great although sustain/decay time and tone may be too much and overwhelming or it may be perfect...just depends on your point of view. But there is no question that the FP90 key action is impressive and feels & moves very nicely, and in my opinion is at or near the top of plastic/plastic hybrid key actions when it comes to playing realism. When you consider the FP90 measures approx 53" long, 15" deep, and 5" tall, is 52 lbs (without the optional furniture stand at $189US and pedals at $150US) and includes a very nice detachable plex music rack, this package looks sleek and sexy and is overall a real pleasure to play. The Roland factory warranty of 3 years parts and 2 years labor is a strong warranty and the reliability on Roland music products has always been excellent based on my experience with them over many years.

When it comes down to which portable digital piano you should purchase, there are a lot of options out there...some are good and some are not so good. I do recommend the new FP90 digital piano because of all the reasons I have talked about. However for me personally, I still enjoy the piano sampled sound technology such as what is used in the Kawai ES8 ($1999US internet price) as being more natural and organic in a portable digital piano (even with some of its limitations) as compared to the Physical Modeling technology in the FP90 portable digital piano. There is just more of an overall warmth in piano tone to me from the Kawai ES8 piano sampling sound chip than what I hear from the Roland FP90...regardless of the internal speaker system being twice as powerful in the FP90 as compared to the Kawai ES8. That's just my personal opinion for what it's worth and you may feel differently. If there were a digital piano that combined the organic warmth of sampling technology from real acoustic pianos combined with Physical Modeling technology to "fill in the cracks" (so to speak) that sampling cannot do, then to me, that may be the perfect piano sound. But for now you get a choice of the Roland Physical Modeled virtual sound technology or the industry standard Sampling (organic) technology. The choice is yours but if you choose the Roland FP90 I think you can be very happy...and that is the goal for me...to see people be happy with their purchase and with their piano playing. I love it when my piano students are happy playing their pianos and that's the way it needs to be. May musical peace and happiness be YOURS!

If you want more info on new digital pianos and LOWER PRICES than internet discounts, please email me at tim@azpianowholesale.com or call direct at 602-571-1864.

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