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Has Digital Reverb and "Tone Editor" with detune, delay, attack/decay and release. Has pitch-bend wheel, MIDI in/out/thru, and tuning fine adjustment. Has "Tone Editor" with detune, delay, attack/decay and release and "Multi-Accompaniment System". Can "register" 4 patches for quick access, similar to the earlier Casiotone 101. Has "Tone Editor" with delay, attack/decay and release. Has "Tone Editor" with detune, delay, attack/decay and release. Tonebank allows layering of two sounds with reduced polyphony. Has "Tone Editor" with detune, delay, attack/decay and release and "Multi-Accompaniment System" Input for BFC-1 Breath Filter Controller which allows control the filters with breath. Has analog filter with cutoff, envelope and resonance controls. 10 presets, 10 user programmable patches. Vibrato, delayed vibrato, heavy vibrato, sustain. Had barcode reader accessory to program the on-board sequencer. 2 additional sound effects (one is a laser). Sustain and vibrato (with options, including vibrato delay). Four tones of choice can be stored for press-button access. Mandolin and Music Box sounds repeat at a fixed interval. Vibrato, sustain effects and tape echo to/from input/output. Casio keyboards from the 1980s and 1990s are used by electronic musicians and sound engineers to achieve an authentic lo-fi sound and some modify them by circuit bending to extend their sound palettes.Ĭasiotone keyboards (1980-present) Series This list includes some of the instruments' basic specifications and is not exhaustive. Some Casio keyboards were integrated into other electronic audio equipment, including AM/FM radios and cassette decks. Many Casio keyboards can be run on both mains electricity and battery power. Most Casio keyboards feature automated accompaniment sections which may include drums, bass, chords and harmonies. MT and PT lines typically feature mini keys and the VL line features push-button keys. The original Casiotone line was abbreviated to CT in the mid-1980s but has continued to feature full-sized keys. Casio electronic musical keyboards were first manufactured in June 1979 and continue to be made by Casio today.
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