

Korg PA-80 conversions have been provided by The Roland styles are from the G-1000 and You'll find styles from Technics keyboards (KN-5000 and KN-7000). I have "tuned" a number of the styles in this section,īut other PSR enthusiasts, as you'll see below, have contributed hundreds ofĪdditional converted styles. That's what you will find in the "Other Keyboards" The end result may not sound a lot like the original,īut it can be a very acceptable style in its own right. The volume of each voice in the accompainment and the OTS as well as the default This tuning can involve modifying the actual voices used and resetting To become acceptable, these "converted" styles must be tuned to a Yamaha Have called for voices that just do not exist on a Yamaha.

In fact, sometimes they sounded pretty bad since the origiinal may "converted" styles loaded into the PSR, but they did not sound much like the Were set to the same level and all the styles were given a default tempo of I have seen "conversions" where all the accompaniment voice volumes Thus, a Roland style can beĬonverted to a format that allows you to load it into a Yamaha. That will read a style file from one keyboard and convert it to an appropriateįormat for a keyboard of a different manufacturer. While styles from the arranger keyboards of other manufacturers are not directlyĬompatible with the Yamaha PSR or Tyros series, it sometimes is possible to "convert"Ī style for use on the Yamaha. Work fine on older keyboards, which do not have "mega" Yamaha's "mega" voices upset this pattern. Use the same XG voice set upon which the styles are built. More or less, interchangeable among Yamaha keyboards.

Sometimes, styles may be compatibleīetween the keyboards of the manufacturer. Specific, that is, a style in a Roland keyboard is designed for that keyboardĪnd sounds best when played in that keyboard. All "Arranger Keyboards" include internal styles that the performerĬan use while playing the keyboard.
