Yamaha CLP765GP Clavinova

CLP765GP

Regular price $7,899.00 Sale price $6,999.00 Save $900.00
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Enjoy the luxurious appearance of a grand piano cabinet with a polished finish, as well as grand piano touch and tone.

  • New Yamaha CFX and Bösendorfer Imperial piano samples, new Yamaha CFX and Bösendorfer binaural sampling
  • 38 voices, including 2 fortepiano voices (Mozart Piano/Chopin Piano)
  • Improved VRM (Virtual Resonance Modeling)
  • Grand Expression Modeling
  • GrandTouch-S™ keyboard with synthetic ebony and ivory keytops
  • (50 W + 42 W) x 2 amplifiers
  • (16 cm + 5 cm) x 2 speaker system
  • USB Audio Recorder (Playback/Recording: WAV)
  • 20 rhythms
  • Built-in Bluetooth® audio
  • Wireless connection to the Smart Pianist app via Bluetooth® MIDI

Yamaha’s latest keyboard action features a broad dynamic range and faithful response to every nuance of touch that puts a wide expanse of tone—from delicate to bold—at the pianist’s fingertips. The highly consistent grand piano hammers replicate the pleasing response felt when the hammers strike the strings, enabling precise control of the tone.

Highly absorbent synthetic-ivory white keys and synthetic-ebony black keys prevent slipping even during extended play and feel just like those of a grand piano.

The interaction and interplay of the hammers, dampers, and strings inside a grand piano respond to the subtlest nuances of the pianist’s touch, creating a limitless range of tonal expression. Touch refers to the pianist’s control, not only of intensity (softness/loudness) in playing and releasing the keys, but also of the speed and depth with which the keys are pressed. The Grand Expression Modeling introduced in the CLP-700 Series translates the widely varied input from the pianist’s fingers into the same limitless tonal variation of a grand piano.

This makes it possible to vary the output by playing the keys to different depths and with different speeds, even when using techniques such as trills or legato or emphasizing the melody over the accompaniment. Grand Expression Modeling excels at faithfully reproducing the output expected of these techniques in many well-known songs. In Debussy’s “Clair de Lune,” a loose touch creates the faint tone that makes the melody stand out more crisply. In Liszt’s “Un Sospiro,” the accompanying arpeggios accent the melody without overwhelming it, and varied expression of the melody gives it the same quality as vocals. In the last of the Chopin nocturnes, trills, legato, and other delicate techniques where fingers seem to float over the keys deliver the airy, smooth tonal expression required. Playing such pieces on a highly expressive piano helps the pianist learn various techniques and experience the same joy of expression as a painter, but through sound.


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