🎼 Elevate Your Sound Game with Yamaha's Motif XF8!
The Yamaha Motif XF8 Music Production Synthesizer is a powerhouse for musicians, featuring 1,353 high-quality voices, 88 balanced hammer-weighted keys, and advanced sound generation technology. With the ability to expand your sound library by up to 2GB, this synthesizer is designed for both professional and aspiring musicians seeking to create and perform with unparalleled sound quality.
Item Weight | 29.4 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions | 64.5 x 22.5 x 9.9 inches |
Color | Black |
M**Z
One Star
So much money this is unfair who people who dont have money i have money but really?
Y**G
Great sound and effect
My husband tried the piano as soon as we recieved it and he could not stop until midnight. We had two other keyboards and none of them has the same effect as this one. He loved it so much.Also, the company J&R Music and Computer World has a very good customer service. When we sent a question to them, they replied very fast and gave us a good solution.Thanks &R Music and Computer World.
J**.
Amazing!
I bought this workstation a while ago and it's amazing. Has tons of piano sounds (good ones) and is easy to make music with this beauty in hand! So glad I bought this instead of the yamaha mox8.
N**E
great key board
I really love this keyboard it has more than met my expectations for a keyboard. I highly recommend it to anyone,but most of the musicians i know already know how good it is or already have one.
R**R
great sound
as expected, the quality of this Yamaha Motif is the best ever. we use it for Church and it makes the worship go to another level.
M**8
A SUPERLATIVE, ALBEIT COMPLEX, WORKSTATION
I'd give the Motif XF8 4.5 stars if that option were available, because, as one of the most costly workstations available, it lacks a few features that ought to be standard and its complexity is a but daunting. Otherwise, it really is an amazing machine. The sounds alone justify the cost and a five star rating.First and foremost, the sounds that the machine generates are the best I've heard. A guitar actually sounds like a guitar, nearly as good as when I record on my Martin and without mistakes. I am primarily a piano player, and the piano voices are top notch. There might be better dedicated piano units available (the Nord Stage comes to mind), but the Motif gets very close. I also like the balanced hammer action. Though it is not as weighted as dedicated top end stage pianos. the action offers sufficient tactile response to make playing easy and responsive. The performance mode is very useful as a starting point to creating music. They are widely varied, offering something for every style. I particularly like it that there are great jazz and classical performances to use. Far too many modern keyboards are geared nearly exclusively to hip-hop and similar styles, leaving those who play more traditional styles out in the cold. You are limited to playing four voices at one time (one of those includes the drum pattern), which is rather meager for a workstation of this level.The Motif is a complicated creature. This is in large part because it does so many things. One can literally create a full composition from scratch, sample, perform, edit, mix, and record it. The problem is that Yamaha could not be bothered creating a manual that actually explains how everything works. I have barely scratched the surface of its capabilities, due in large part to the ridiculously spartan owner's manual. For a machine this capable and complex, you'd think Yamaha could have spent a little more effort putting together a manual that actually shows the owner how to extract its full potential. or at least have decent online support. But that is equally useless. Be prepared to learn the complexities on your own. The motifator forum is very good, and offers a lot of help, but you end up wasting a lot of time rummaging through various threads and posts trying to find information that should have been in the manual to begin with.There are a few features that are lacking in this flagship unit. For one thing, there is no flash memory included, only a measly 128mb of volatile RAM. Try downloading any set of voices, and you will quickly see that they far exceed this puny onboard memory. Which means you have to pay $150-$300 for either 512 or 1 gb of flash memory. Yamaha makes the flash proprietary, so you cannot install standard flash cards. So, that's $600 extra for 2 gb of flash rom, at least half of which is probably necessary.Yamaha also sells as a $300 option a firewire expansion port which allows us to record audio into a computer via firewire, instead of the standard USB port which only allows MIDI. If you want to record audio-don't we all?-you have to spring for the card or buy an separate interface. I already own an Apogee Duet, which works just fine, but if you don't, that's yet another expense. The firewire port should be standard.I am still learning the interface of the Motif, but my initial impression is that it is far from user friendly. There are countless tiny black buttons protruding from the black metal body (which is of a rough texture, and holds fingerprints like superglue) not color-coded in any way. The display is good but not great. There is a lot of information in very small font size, and to move from screen to screen entails trying to line up and press the correct physical button that corresponds to the menu on the screen. It is quite clumsy. On the other hand, there is a physical button (even if it is small and looks like every other one) for nearly every important control, so there is a lot less digging through screens than there might be. Still, Yamaha could do much better in the ergonomics department.The internal sequencer is MIDI only, very useful, but an audio recorder would be welcome. Trying to record the MIDI from the internal sequencer to a DAW (something that many would want to do) is more complicated than building a spy satellite. I still haven't figured it out and can't find much assistance. This is the inherent problem with the Motif. It does so many things and most of them quite well, but because only the most basic functions are explained, it is easy to spend hours and hours trying to figure out how to record something, for example.So, in the end, I just end up playing the keyboard as a piano, and that is always enjoyable.
E**Y
Dream board.
Although i did not purchase through amazon i can assure i do own one which i purchased in october.When it first arrived i was taken aback by how big the box was and how akwardly heavy it was. I was home by myself when it had arrived and my room is on the top most floor of the flat meaning many steap steps. 10 min later i her laying on my bed. I cut her open very carefully and when i first laid eyes on her i said wow. Seriously. Shes quite larger than i had assumed.Once she was out of the box and on my studio desk i sat back for a second and thought to myself shes too big. Im going to need to put my studio speakers on stands behind my desk for sure. About 4 hours later after i had time to install 2 1gb flash modules, set her up and install some voice libraries from the anniversary pack i knew i had made the right choice. My dream keyboard was a reality. She sounds great. She responds wonderfully and accurately and the fact i can change the backlight to purple is a bonus.my next board will be a rolli seaboard grand 88. I think paired together they will produce some beautiful musical babies.worth every dollar spent.negatives. Manuel is lacking so much information needed, and loading multiple voice libraries is troublesome at best. When you get it to work tho amazing.as for the montage im not easily distracted by flashly lights and i have tried and trsted the montage. Prefer my xf8.
E**O
The flagship Yamaha professional workstation.
Superlative comprehensive keyboard workstation. Absolutely reliable, durable, and extremely organized controls. This is the flagship workstation from Yamaha in the latest version. Beginners & newbies should expect months of experimenting and learning these steep knowledge curves. This is a very deep instrument with shallow documentation. The product includes a simplified manual, table-format data lists, and a reference manual, in additional to a spectacular online community for users of all levels. The Motif XF exudes Yamaha quality. As one of the most comprehensive and versatile workstations available, I would mention that Yamaha's Motif series would favor those who prefer pristine acoustic & natural sounds. It can decidedly create techno-electric dance performances & synthetic waves, but the natural acoustic emulations are unmatched, period.
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