Yamaha • CS-50

Yamaha CS-50 Image

The CS-50 was released just one year before its famous big brothers, the CS-60 and CS-80. The CS-50 looks like a scaled-down version of the monstrous CS-80, and it is! This will benefit those who crave the famous classic Yamaha synth sound without the struggle of lugging around the 215 pound CS-80! The CS-50 weighs in at about 100 pounds. The CS-50 is also just 4-voice polyphonic, and lacks the quality weighted 61-note keyboard of the CS-80. The CS-50 has just a 49-note standard keyboard. It does feature pressure (aftertouch) sensitivity route-able to several destinations, however.

The CS-50's sound is unmistakably related to other classic CS-series synthesizers. At just four voices with one osc. per voice and lacking warm filters (at just 12dB/oct) the CS-50's sound can be thin. There are 13 preset sounds of various instruments and synth sounds but, unfortunately, no on-board memory storage for your edited presets. At its low street price, the CS-50 makes a great way to get your hands on these classic sounds without going broke! It's too bad their tuning is just as unstable as the other CS-series synths. It's housed in a built-in travel-case like the other (big) CS-synths. It's been used by Men Without Hats and Herbie Hancock.


VISITOR COMMENTS

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lf0
Posted 440 days ago
sorry gainsey - have to say that the tuning is unstable but perhaps not as bad as the cs-50...
I own one and it drifts, not to tricky to tune though.
Great fun instrument but a little thin - get yourself a chorus pedal.
micke
Posted 462 days ago
The CS-50 has also been used by Loverboy and Ultravox (Midge Ure).
Automatic GAinsay
Posted 463 days ago
You'll be happy to know that the CS-50's tuning is not unstable, but rock solid! Do not fear the CS-80 tuning problems, as the design issues which lead to them are not present in the CS-50. You get the benefit of the same oscillators without the tuning problems!
 

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