Operation Manual
Selecting & Playing Voices
P-95 Owner’s Manual
ENGLISH
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Selecting & Playing Voices
Selecting Voices
1. Press one of the voice buttons.
2. Adjust the volume.
Re-adjust the [MASTER VOLUME] slider (page 9) for the most comfortable lis-
tening level during your performance.
To familiarize yourself with the
characteristics of the voices, lis-
ten to the demo songs for each
voice (page 12).
TERMINOLOGY
Voice:
In this manual, the term “voice”
means “instrument sound.”
When you select a voice, an
appropriate reverb type will be
selected automatically (page 18).
NOTE
NOTE
Voice Name Description
GRAND PIANO 1
Recorded samples from a full concert grand piano. Perfect for
classical compositions as well as any other style that requires
acoustic piano.
GRAND PIANO 2 Clear piano with bright reverb. Good for popular music.
E. PIANO 1
An electronic piano sound created by FM synthesis. Good for
popular music.
E. PIANO 2
The sound of an electric piano using hammer-struck metallic
“tines.” Soft tone when played lightly, and an aggressive tone
when played hard.
JAZZ ORGAN
The sound of a tonewheel type electric organ. Often heard in jazz
and rock idioms.
PIPE ORGAN
This is a typical pipe organ sound (8 feet + 4 feet + 2 feet). Good
for sacred music from the Baroque period.
STRINGS
Spacious and large-scale string ensemble. Try combining this
voice with piano in DUAL.
CHOIR
A big, spacious choir voice. Perfect for creating rich harmonies in
slow pieces.
HARPSICHORD
The definitive instrument for baroque music. Since the strings of a
harpsichord are plucked, there is no touch response.
VIBRAPHONE The sound of a vibraphone played with relatively soft mallets.
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