This is a list of products made by Yamaha Corporation. This does not include products made by Bösendorfer, which has been a wholly owned subsidiary of Yamaha Corporation since February 1, 2008.
For products made by Yamaha Motor Company, see the list of Yamaha motorcycles. Yamaha Motor Company shares the brand name but has been a separate company since 1955.
Musical instruments
editPianos
editIn 1900, Yamaha started to manufacture pianos.
Grand pianos
edit- CF series (full length concert grand)
- FC / CF (1949–67 / 1967–91)
- CFIII (1983–2000)
- CFIIIS (1991–2010)
- CF4 (2010–
- CF6 (2010–
- CFX (2010–)
- C series (including several G)
- G1 / C1 / C1x (1988–94 / 1994–2012 / 2012–)
- DC1A
- #20 / G2 / C2 /C2x (~1934–55 / 1947–94 / 1994–2012 / 2012–)
- G2F / DG2FII
- C3 / C3x (1967–2012 / 2012–)
- #35 / G5 / new C5 / C5x (1948–1953 / 1954–94 / 1994–2008 / 2012–)
- old C5 / C6 / C7 (1979–94 / 1994–2012)
- G7 / C7 / C7x (1954–67 / 1967–2008 / 2012–)
- SC / CS (1953–67 / 1967–79)
- G series
- Note: prefix D means Disklavier
- suffix S / SG means Silent grand
- G1, G2, G5, G7 (listed on C series)
- #25 / G3 (1949–53 / 1954–94)
- GA1E[1] / DGA1[XG][E] (Polished Ebony finish)
- GC1
- GC1S / GC1SG[1] (2002–)
- GC1G / GC1FP[1] (Georgian Brown mahogany / French Provincial Brown Cherry)
- GC1M* / DGC1 / DGC1ME3 (*In North America, GC1 was introduced without the sostenuto pedal, instead (it was bass sustain. In 2007, it finally launched in Europe, but never having received the non sosteunto version, there was no need to add the M designation; whereas in North America, the GC1M was also launched in 2007 to distinguish between the earlier version. Confusingly, GC1M's from NA are the same as GC1 from EU, while GC1 from NA is a completely different model. This confusion could have been avoided if they'd simply named the European ones the same, CG1M)
- GC2
- GH1 / GH1G
- GT7
- A series (branched from C series)
- A1 (1993–)
- A1[L][S][SG]
- DA1IIXG / DA1E3 / DA1M4
- EA1 (2000–08)
- S series
- S4 (1994–)
- S4BB
- DS4E3PRO PE
- S6 (1994–)
- S6BB
- DS6E3PRO PE
- S400 (1982–94)
- S700E (1989–94)
- Z series
- Z1 (2003–07)
- Z1B
Baby grand pianos
edit- GB1
- GB1K / DGB1CD — most compact models (depth: 151 cm or 59 in) on current product line[2]
Upright pianos
edit- B1
- B2
- B3
- Hosseschrueders HC 10
- Hosseschrueders HC 30
- C108
- M460
- M560
- P121
- P22
- P660
- SU118C
- T118
- T121
- U1
- U10
- U10 BL
- U100
- U2
- U2M
- U3
- U30
- U300
- U5
- U7
- UX
- UX1
- UX10
- UX100
- UX3
- UX30
- UX300
- UX5
- UX50
- UX500
- YU116D/W
- YUA
- YUS1
- YUS3
- YUS5
- YUX
- SU7
Player pianos
edit- Disklavier
- Disklavier E3 series
- disklavier control unit
- control unit for player piano, consists with MIDI recorder and PCM sound
- DKC-850 (MIDI recorder with PCM sound (AWM2))
- EMR1 (MIDI recorder with PCM sound (AWM2:XG/GM))
Silent pianos
edit- silent piano system
- silencer & optical sensor, with PCM sound & MIDI recorder unit
- RSG-1 / RSG-3 / RSG-5 / RSG-10 / RSG-30 (2008, for U1/U3/-/UX10/b121/YF&b113)
- ensemble unit
- RE-1 / RE-3 / RE-10 / RE-30 (1999, for U1/U3/UX10/W100)
- silent ensemble unit
- RSE-1 / RSE-3 / RSE-10 (1999, for U1/U3/UX10)
- Newer Silent Piano Systems
- SG-1 - ? - ?
- SG-2 - ? - ?
- SC-1 (Aka. SC) - ? -
- SC-2 - ? - 2023
- SC-3 - 2022 onwards
SC series found in Upright B1, B2, B3 and Grand GB1K - "entry level" models.
- SH-1 (Aka. SH)
- SH-2 - ? - 2023
- SH-3 - 2022 onwards
SH series silent modules found in more up market models such as Uprights P116, P121, U1, U3, YUS1, YUS3, YUS5, SE122, SE132, SU7 and Grand S3X, S5X, S6X, S7X, C1X, C2X, C3X, C3X Chrome, C5X, C6X, GC1 and GC2. (at the time of writing according to Yamaha.com[permanent dead link])
TransAcoustic (Silent with a transducer added to essentially make the piano one big speaker)
- TA-1 (Aka TA)
- TA-2
- TA-3 2023 onwards
Found in uprights: U1, U3, YUS1, YUS3, YUS5 and Grands GC1 and C1X according to yamaha.com
Hybrid pianos
editHybrid grand pianos
edit- AvantGrand N1X (2019-)
- AvantGrand N3X (2016-)
- AvantGrand N3 (2009-2016)
- AvantGrand N2 (2009-)
- AvantGrand N1 (2011-2019)
- DGP-7
- DGP-5
- DGP-2
- DGP-1
Hybrid upright pianos
edit- NU1XA (2023-)
- NU1X (2017-2023)[3]
- NU1 (2012-2017)
- DUP-22 (2009-2012)
- DUP-8 (2009-2012)
- DUP-20 (2001-2009)
- DUP-7 (2001-2009)
- DUP-10 (1998-2001)
- DUP-5 (1998-2001)
- DUP-1 (1996-1998)
Stage pianos
editElectric pianos
edit- CP series (electric grand)
- CP-60M (upright, with MIDI)
- CP-70
- CP-70B
- CP-70D (with 7-band GEQ)
- CP-70M (with 7-band GEQ & MIDI)
- CP-80 (1978-1986)[4]
- CP-80D (with 7-band GEQ)
- CP-80M (with 7-band GEQ & MIDI) (1986-1988)
Analog stage pianos
edit- CP series (analog)
- CP-7 (1982)
- CP-10 (1979)
- CP-20 (1977)
- CP-30 (1976)
- CP-11 / CP-11W (1981/1982)
- CP-25 (1981)
- CP-35 (1981)
Digital stage pianos
edit- GS1 / GS2 (1980) — 1st FM synth of Yamaha.
- CP series (digital)
- CP1 (2009)
- CP4 (2014)
- CP5 (2010)
- CP33 (2006)
- CP40 (2014)
- CP50 (2010)
- CP73 (2019)
- CP88 (2019)
- CP300 (2006)
- Reface series
- Reface CP (2015)
- Clavinova PF series
- PF10 / PF12 / PF15 (1983)
- PF50 / PF60 (1986)
- PF70 / PF80 (1985)
- PF85 (1987)
- PF-500 (2002)
- PF-1000 (2002)
- PF1200 / PF1500 / PF2000 (1989)
Digital pianos
edit- MODUS series
- Modus F01 (2007, 4colors:PB(blue)/PE(black)/PO(orange)/PR(red), similar to CLP-F01(2004))
- Modus F11 (2007, 4colors)
- Modus H01 (2006, 3colors:AG(yellow)/DB(black)/VR(red))
- Modus H11 (2009, 3colors)
- Modus R01 (2009, white)
Clavinova series
edit- YP-10 / YP-20 / YP-30 (1983), 1st generation
- YP-40 (1983, export model), 1st generation
- CWP-1 (2001)
- Clavinova Grand (CGP/CVP-GP/CLP-GP)
- CGP-1000 (May 8, 2006)
- CVP-309GP (October 29, 2003)
- CVP-409GP (May 8, 2006)
- CLP-175 (2003, export model), predecessor of CLP-295GP
- CLP-265GP (2006)
- CLP-295GP (2006)
- Clavinova Ensemble (CVP)
- (finishes: default = dark rosewood, C = cherry, M = mahogany, PE = polished ebony, PM = polished mahogany)
- CVP-3 / CVP-5 / CVP-7 (1985)
- CVP-6 / CVP-8 / CVP-10 / CVP-100MA / CVP-100PE (1987)
- CVP-20 (1988, export model)
- CVP-30 / CVP-50 / CVP-70 (1989)
- CVP-35 / CVP-45 / CVP-55 / CVP-65 / CVP-75 (1991)
- CVP-25 (1993, export model)
- CVP-83 / CVP-85 / CVP-87 (1993)
- CVP-85A
- CVP-83S[White] / CVP-87A[White]
- CVP-89 (1994, export model)
- CVP-49 (1995, export model)
- CVP-59[S] / CVP-69 / CVP-79 (1995)
- CVP-79A
- CVP-92 / CVP-94 / CVP-96 / CVP-98 (February 18, 1997)
- CVP-600 (February 18, 1997)
- CVP-103 [M] / CVP-105 / CVP-107 / CVP-109 (March 1, 1999)
- CVP-700 (March 1, 1999, export model)
- CVP-201 (March 1, 2001)
- CVP-203 / CVP-205 / CVP-207 / CVP-209 (June 25, 2001)
- CVP-900 (May 27, 2002, export model)
- CVP-202 (November 1, 2002)
- CVP-204 [C] / CVP-206 [M] (September 10, 2002)
- CVP-208 [M] / CVP-210 (September 10, 2002, export model)
- CVP-301 (October 29, 2003, export model)
- CVP-303 [C] / CVP-305 [C] / CVP-307 / CVP-309 [PE][PM] (October 29, 2003)
- CVP-401 [C][PE] / CVP-403 [C][PE][PM] / CVP-405 [PE][PM] / CVP-407 / CVP-409 [PE][PM] (May 8, 2006)
- CVP-501 / CVP-503 / CVP-505 [PE] / CVP-509 [PE][PM] (February 5, 2009)
- CVP-601 / CVP-605 / CVP-609 / CVP-609GP (July 13, 2012)
- CVP-701 / CVP-705 / CVP-709 / CVP-709GP (June 17, 2015)
- CVP-805 / CVP-809 / CVP-809GP (May 1, 2019)
- CVP-905 / CVP-909 / CVP-909GP (April 13, 2023)
- Clavinova Traditional (CLP)
- (finishes: default = dark rosewood, C = cherry, M = mahogany, PE = polished ebony, PM = polished mahogany)
- CLP-20 / CLP-30 (1985)
- CLP-40 / CLP-45 / CLP-50 / CLP-55 / CLP-200 / CLP-300 (1986)
- CLP-100 / CLP-500 (1987)
- CLP-250 / CLP-350 / CLP-550 / CLP-650 (1988)
- CLP-570 / CLP-670 (1989)
- CLP-260 / CLP-360 / CLP-560 / CLP-760 (1990)
- CLP-121 / CLP-122 / CLP-123 / CLP-124 (1992)
- CLP-133 / CLP-134 / CLP-705 (1993)
- CLP-152S / CLP-153S / CLP-153SG / CLP-154S / CLP-155 / CLP-157 (1994)
- CLP-311 / CLP-611 / CLP-811 (1996, export model)
- CLP-411 / CLP-511 / CLP-711 / CLP-911 (1996)
- CLP-555 (1997, AE action, grand piano style)
- CLP-810S (1998, export model)
- CLP-820 / CLP-840 / CLP-860[M] / CLP-870 / CLP-880[M][PE] (1998)
- CLP-920 / CLP-930 / CLP-950[C][M] / CLP-970[C][M] (2000)
- CLP-955 / CLP-970A[C][M] (2000, export model)
- CLP-910 / CLP-990[M] (2001, export model)
- CLP-110 (2002, export model)
- CLP-120[C] / CLP-130 / CLP-150[C][M] / CLP-170[C][M][PE] (2002/2003(PE))
- CLP-115 (2003, export model)
- CLP-175 (2003, Clavinova Grand, export model)
- CLP-220[PE] (2005/2006)
- CLP-230[C][M][PE] / CLP-240[C][M][PE] / CLP-270[C][M] / CLP-280[C][PE][PM] (2005/2006)
- CLP-320[C][M] / SCLP-320 / CLP-330[C][M][PE] / CLP-340[C][M][PE] / CLP-370[C][M][PE] / CLP-380[PE][PM] (2008)
- CLP-430 / CLP-440 / CLP-470 / CLP-480 (2011?)
- CLP-525 / CLP-535 / CLP-545 / CLP-565GP / CLP-575 / CLP-585 (2014)
- CLP-625 / CLP-635 / CLP-645 / CLP-665GP / CLP-675 / CLP-685 (2017)
- CLP-725 / CLP-735 / CLP-745 / CLP-765GP / CLP-775 / CLP-785 / CLP-795GP (2020)
- CLP-S series (spinet style similar to Modus F01/F11)
- Clavinova 610
- CLP-F01 (2004, 4colors: PB(blue)/PE(black)/PO(orange)/PR(red))
- CLP-S306[PE] / CLP-S308[PE] (2008)
- CLP-S406 / CLP-S408 (2011?)
- Clavinova Smart Piano (CSP)
- (finishes: B = Black Walnut, W = Satin White, PE = Polished Ebony)
- CSP-150 [B][W][PE] (April 21, 2017)
- CSP-170 [B][W][PE] (April 21, 2017)
P-series (stands for "portable")
edit- (colors: B = Black & Ebony, S = Silver & Cherry, W = White)
|
ARIUS/YDP series
edit- (finishes: C = bright wood color)
|
|
- YPP series
- YPP-15 / YPP-33 (1991)
- YPP-35 (1991, export model)
- YPP-45
- YPP-50
- YPP-55 (1992)
- YPP-100 (2002)
- YPP-200 (2001, export model)
- YPR series
- YPR-6 / YPR-8 (1985)
- YPR-7 / YPR-9 (1986)
- YPR-20 / YPR-30 (1990)
- YPR-50 (1999)
- YPT series (this Series are Similar to The PSR 'E' Series. Only that it is A White Variation)
- YPT-200 (2005)
- YPT-210 (2007, export model)
- YPT-210AD / YPT-210DI / YPT-210MS / YPT-210MSB
- YPT-220 (2009, export model)
- YPT-230 (2011, export model))
- YPT-240 (2013)
- YPT-255 (2015)
- YPT-260 (2017)
- YPT-270 (2020)
- YPT-280 (2024)
- YPT-300 (2005)
- YPT-310 (2007, export model)
- YPT-310AD / YPT-310MS / YPT-310MSB
- YPT-320 (2009, export model)
- YPT-330 (2011, export model)
- YPT-340 (2013)
- YPT-360 (2017)
- YPT-370 (2020)
- YPT-380 / YPT-W320 (2024)
- YPT-400 (2005, export model)
- YPT-410 (2007, export model)
- YPT-420 (2009, export model)
J-series Digital Pianos
edit- J-3000 (1998)
- J-5000 (2000)
- J-7000 (2002)
- J-8000 (2005/2006)
- J-9000 (2008)
Piaggero/NP series portable digital piano
edit- NP-11
- NP-12 (2016)
- NP-15 (August 27, 2023)
- NP-30 / NP-30S (2007, S = silver)
- NP-31
- NP-32 (2016)
- NP-35 (August 27, 2023)
- NP-V60 / NP-V80 (May 1st, 2009)
Portable Grand DGX / YPG series
edit- (color: DGX = Silver, Black or White; YPG = Champagne Gold)
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Entertainment Series
- PSR-K1 (February 6, 2003)
- others
- N-100 (2006, with Graded Hammer Effect, weighted-action KB)
- PDP400
- PSR-GX76 (2000, export model, with Portable Grand)
Organs
editPump organs
editIn 1888, Yamaha started to manufacture their pump organs in the form of reed organs.
In 1921, Yamaha acquired Nishikawa & Sons in Yokohama after the death of its founder, and continued to manufacture Nishikawa organs and pianos until 1936.
Magna organ (1934)
editMagna Organ introduced in 1935,[7][8] was a multi-timbral keyboard instrument invented in 1934 by a Yamaha engineer, Sei-ichi Yamashita. It was a kind of electro-acoustic instrument, an acoustic instrument with additional electronic circuits for sound modification. The Magna Organ was an electric-fan driven free reed organ with the microphone sealed in a soundproof box, instead of the electrostatic pickups used on electrostatic reed organs.[note 1] Early designs of the Magna Organ were a kind of additive-synthesizer that summed-up the partials generated by the frequency-multipliers.[9][10] However, it was difficult to achieve polyphony without intermodulation distortions with the technology of the 1930s.[11] According to the additional patents[12][13] and the reviews at that time,[9] its later design as finally implemented, seems to have shifted to the sound-colorization system using the combinations of sets of free reeds, microphones and loudspeakers.[11]
Note that, similar type of instruments using the pairs of free reeds and microphones sealed in double-soundproof boxes, were later re-commercialized as Croda Organs in 1959 by Tōyō Denshi Gakki Kenkyūjo (In English: Tōyō Electronic Musical Instrument Laboratory) in Tokyo.[14]
Electronic organs
editThe most models and years of introductions are based on official chronicle.[15] Also, the photograph of major models on each era is available on the 50th anniversary site.[16]
- Prototype Electone
- E-T (1958, prototype concept model)[17]
- ET-5 (May 1959, Improved version of E-T Prototype)[18]
- EM-6 (May 1959, Single-stage keyboard prototype)
- 1st Electone
- D-1 (1959–1962, electronic organ products)
- Stage models
- EX-21 (1968, prototype of EX-42)[19]
- EX-42 (1970–1977, stage model, design origin of GX-1)
- SY-1 (1971,[20] solo part of GX-1, monophonic synth with initial/after touch)
- SY-2 (1971)[20]
- GX-1 (1973[21] to 1982, polyphonic synth)
- EX-1 / EX-2 (1977–1983)[22]
- FX-1 (1983–1988, FM synthesis)
- HX System1 (1987–1992)
- HX-1 / HX-1S (1987/1989, AWM(PCM)+FM)
- ELX-1 / ELX-1m (1992/2000)
- Number series
- 305 / 315 (1979, export model)
- 405 / 415 (1980, U.S. models of the D-65 / D-85)
- 6000 (1981, export model)
- 7000 (1982, export model)
- A series
- A-2 (1960–1963)
- A-3 (1966, red combo organ, forerunner of YC series)
- A-40 / A-60 (1977, export model)
- A-45 / A-55 (1978, export model)
- A-505 (1982, export model)
- AR series
- AR-80 (1997, export model)
- AR-100 (1996, export model)
- B series
- B-1 (1961–1962)
- B-3 (1964–1965)
- B-5 (1965–1969)
- B-6 (1966, export model)
- B-7 / B-7D (1967, export model)
- B-2 / B-6B (1968–1971)
- B-6E / B-12 / B-12R (1970, export model)
- B-2B / B-4 / B-5A / B-6D / B-10A (1971–1973...1978(B-4))
- B-4B / B-5BR / B-6ER / B10AR / B-20R (1971, export model)
- B-4C / B-4CR / B-10BR / B-30R (1972, export model)
- B-6R / B-10R (1972–1974/1975)
- B-5CR (1973, export model)
- B-2R (1974, export model)
- B-11 / B-20 / B-30 / B-30T / B-50 / B-50T (1974–1975...1978(B-30))
- B-20CR / B-30AR / B-40R / B-50R (1976, export model)
- B-40 / B-45 / B-60 (1977, export model)
- B-35 / B-55 / B-75 (1978, export model)
- B-70 (1979–1982)
- B-101 / B-102 / B-103 (1982–1984)
- B-204 / B-405 / B-605 / B-805 (1982, export model)
- BK-2 (1975, export model)
- BK-4 / BK-7 (1973, export model)
- BK-4C / BK-5C / BK-20C (1976, export model)
- BK-5 (1974)
- BK-6 (1971, export model)
- BK-10 (1976–1978)
- BK-20A (1972, export model)
- BK-30 / BK-50 (1975–1978)
- C series
- C-1 (1964–1966)
- C-2 / C-2S (1966–1967)
- C-1B / C-2B (1967–1971)
- C-4 / C-5A (1971–1973/1974)
- C-4R / C-5R (1972–1974/1975)
- C-10T (1973–1975)
- C-10 / C-10H / C-30 / C-30H / C-30T / C-50 / C-50T (1974–1975)
- C-40 / C-60 (1977, export model)
- C-35 / C-35i (1978, export model)
- C-80 / C-90 (1979–1982)
- C-100 / C-200 / C-300 / C-400 (1978–1981/1982(C-300))
- C-201 / C-301 / C-401 / C-501 (1982–1983/1984(C-301))
- C-405 / C-605 (1982, export model)
- C-35N / C-55N (1982, export model)
- CK-10 (1975–1978)
- CK-30 / CK-50 (1976–1978)
- CN-50 (1979, export model)
- CSY-1 (1974–1975)
- CSY-2 (1975, export model)
- D series
- D-1 (1959–1962)
- D-1B (1962)
- D-2 (1962, export model)
- D-2B (1967–1971)
- D-3 (1971–1972)
- D-3R / D-10 (1971–1975)
- D-7 (1969–1972)
- D-7R (1969, export model)
- D-20 / D-30 (1975–1977)
- D-30E (1976, export model)
- D-40 / D-60 / D-90 (1977–1980)
- D-65 / D-85 (1980, export model)
- D-80 (1977, export model)
- D-600 / D-700 / D-800 (1980–1981/1983)
- D-500 (1983)
- DK-40A (1972, export model)
- DK-40C (1976, export model)
- E series
- E-1 (1962–1966)
- E-2 (1966–1968)
- E-3 (1968–1972)
- E-3R (1970)
- E-5 (1971, export model)
- E-5AR (1973, export model)
- E-10 (1975–1977)
- E-10AR (1972, export model)
- E-20 (1972–1977)
- E-30 / E-50 / E-70 (1977–1980/1981)
- E-70 (1977–1981, PASS)
- E-45 / E-75 (1981, export model)
- E-500 / E-700 (1981–1982/1983)
- EL series (AWM(PCM) + FM)
- EL-7
- EL-15
- EL-17 (1995–2002)
- EL-20 (1993–2000)
- EL-25
- EL-27 (1993–2000)
- EL-37 (1994–2000)
- EL-30 (1991–1996)
- EL-40
- EL-50 (1991–1996)
- EL-57 (1996–1999)
- EL-70 (1991–1996)
- EL-87 / EL-87W (1995–1999)
- EL-90 (1991–1998)
- EL-100 (2002–2006)
- EL-200 (2000–2002)
- EL-400 (2000–2006)
- EL-500 (1999–2003)
- EL-700 (1999–2003)
- EL-900 (1998–2003)
- EL-900B (2002–2003)
- EL-900m (2000–2003)
- ELA-1 (2022)
- ELK-10 (1994–2001)
- ELK-400 (2001–2006)
- ELX-1 (1992–2000)
- ELX-1m (2000–2005)
- Stagea series
- ELB-01 / ELB-01K (2006–2015)
- ELS-01 / ELS-01C (2004–2014)
- ELS-01X (2005–2014)
- ELS-01U / ELS-01CU / ELS-01XU (2009–)
- ELS-02 / ELS-02C / ELS-02X (2014-)
- ELB-02 (2015-)
- ELC-02 (2016-)
- Stagea D-Deck series
- DDK-7 (2006, Stagea with portable keyboard style)
- F series
- F-1 (1964–1979)
- F-2 (1966–1975)
- F series console organ
- F-30 / F-70 / F-50 (1981–1988)
- F-5 / F-15 / F-25 / F-35 / F-45 / F-55 (1984, export model)
- F-100 / F-200 (1994–2000)
- F-300 / F-400 (1992–2000/1996)
- F-700 (1989)
- FC/FE/FS/FX series (FM synthesis)
- FC-10 / FC-20 (1984–1986)
- FE-30 / FE-40 / FE-50 / FE-50M / FE-50MB / FE-60 / FE-70 (1984–1986/1987)
- FS-20 / FS-30 / FS-30M / FS-50 / FS-70 (1983–1986...1988(FS-30M))
- FS-30A (1986–1987)
- FS-100 / FS-200 / FS-300 / FS-500 (1983, export model)
- FX-1 / FX-3 / FX-10 / FX-20 (1983–1987/1988)
- HA/HC/HE/HK/HS/HX series (AWM(PCM) + FM)
- HA-10 (1988–2001, 1manual)
- HC-1 / HC-3 (1989–1994/1993)
- HE-5 (1988–1994)
- HK-10 (1988–1995)
- HS-4 / HS-5 / HS-6 / HS-7/ HS-8 (1987–1992)
- HX System1 (1987–1992)
- HX-3 / HX-5 (1987–1992)
- HX-1S (1989)
- CHX-1 (1987, export model)
- MC Series
- MC-200 / MC-400 / MC-600
- ME series
- ME-400 / ME-600 (1985–1987)
- ME-15 / ME-35 / ME-55 (1986–1989, portable keyboard style)
- MR series
- MR-1 (1983, export model, single manual)
- T series
- T-30 / T-60 (1966)
- US series
- US-1 (1988, export model)
- US-1000 (1988, export model, single manual)
Combo organs
edit- A-3 (1966)
- YC series
- YC-10 (1969)
- YC-20 (1970)
- YC-30 (1970)
- YC-25D (1972)
- YC-45D (1972)
- YC-61/YC-73/YC-88 (2021) Based on Yamaha CP73 and CP88 and Nord with added drawbars
- Reface series (digital)
- Reface YC (2015)
Ensemble keyboards
edit- SS30 (1977, string ensemble)
- CE20 / CE25 (1982) — cost down preset version of FM synth GS1 / GS2.
- SY20 (1982, ensemble synthesizer for classroom)
- SK series
- SK10 (1979, organ/string/brass)
- SK15 (1981, organ/poly-synth/string)
- SK20 (1980, organ/poly-synth)
- SK30 (1980, organ/poly-synth/solo-synth)
- SK50D (1980, 2 manuals organ/poly-synth/solo-synth/bass)
Synthesizers
edit- Magna organ (1935–?)[23][24] — See #Magna Organ.
- GX
- GX-1 (1973/1975–1982) — 1st polyphonic synthesizer of Yamaha, released as Electone electronic organ
- SY series
- SY-1 (1974, solo part of GX-1, monophonic synth with initial/after touch)
- SY-2 (c. 1975, a successor of SY-1)
- for the workstations, see below
- CS series (monophonic)
- CS-01 (1982, shoulder keyboard, with breath controller)
- CS-5 (1978)
- CS-10 (1977)
- CS-15 (1978, monophonic dual channel)
- CS-15D (1978, monophonic dual channel)
- CS-20M (1979, monophonic, patch memory)
- CS-30 / CS30L (1977, monophonic dual modules, L = live performance version without analog seq.)
- CS series (polyphonic)
- CS-40M (1979, 2-voice, patch memory)
- CS-50 (1977, 4-voice)
- CS-60 (1977, 8-voice)
- CS-70M (1981, 6-voice dual channel, patch memory, polyphonic seq.)
- CS-80 (1976, 8-voice[25] dual channel)
- DX/TX series
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- DX21 (1985, 4op FM)
- DX27 / DX27S / SDX27S (1985/1986/1986, S = speakers, SDX = classroom model ?)
- DX100 (1985, 4op FM, DX27 with mini keyboard)
- VL/VP series (virtual acoustic)
- VL1 / VL1m (1993/1994, Self oscillation/Virtual Acoustic synthesizer)
- VL7 / VL70m (1994/1996, cost down version of VL1/VL1m)[26]
- VP1 (1994, Free oscillation/Virtual Acoustic synthesizer)
- CSx/ANx series (virtual analog / sample-based synthesis)
- AN1x (1997, virtual analog)
- CS1x (1996, similar to MU50. AWM2 engine, sample-based synthesis.)
- CS2x (1998, similar to MU90 except for insertion effects. AWM2 engine.)
- CS6x / CS6R (1999, support MSPS. AWM2 engine.)
- S series
- S03[BL] / S03SL (2001/2004, BL = black, SL = silver)
- S08 (2002, extended version of S03, support XG and GM2)
- S30 (2000, based on CS6x)
- S70 XS (2009, based on Motif XS without sequencer and sampler)
- S80 (1999, based on CS6x)
- S90 (2002, based on Motif 8 without sequencer and sampler)
- S90ES (2005, based on Motif 8 ES without sequencer and sampler, support MSPS)
- S90XS (2009, based on Motif XS without sequencer and sampler)
- MX49 / MX61 (2012) - successor to MM6/MM8, with more than 1000 sounds from Motif XS
- MX88 (2017)
- Reface CS (2015, 8 voice (single multimode oscillator per voice), virtual analog synthesizer based on the CS series)
- Reface DX (2015, 8 Voice, 4 op fm based on the DX series)
Music workstations
edit- V series
- V2 (1987, marketed outside Japan as DX11. keyboard version of TX81Z)
- V50 (1989, music workstation, successor of DX11)
- SY series (AFM/PCM/RCM(PCM×AFM))
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- W series
- W5 / W5 ver.2 (1994/1995)
- W7 / W7 ver.2 (1994/1995) — 61-key, AWM2 synthesis[27]
- EX series
- EX5 / EX5S / EX5R (1998)
- EX7 (1998)
- Motif series
- Motif 6/7/8 (2001)[28]
- Motif-Rack (2002)
- Motif ES 6/7/8 (2003)
- Motif-Rack ES (2004)
- MO6 / MO8 / SDX-4000 (SDX = classroom keyboard based on MO6S) (2005)
- MM6 / MM8 (2007/2008) - successor to EOS B2000
- Motif XS 6/7/8 (2007)
- Motif-Rack XS (2008)
- Motif XF (2010)
- MOX6 / MOX8 (2011) - with the sound engine and sample-ROM from Motif XS, half polyphony, no sampler
- MX49 / MX61 (2012) - successor to MM6/MM8, with more than 1000 sounds from Motif XS
- MOXF6 / MOXF8 (2013) - sound engine and sample-ROM from Motif XF, optional sample-flash-ROM
- Motif XF6/XF7/XF8 WH (2014) - 40th Anniversary, special edition MOTIF XF white
- MX88 (2017)
- Montage series
- Montage 6/7/8 (2016-2023)
- MODX 6/7/8 (2018)
- Montage 6/7/8 WH (2019-2023) - white edition
- MODX+ 6/7/8 (2022)
- Montage M M6/M7/M8x (October 10, 2023)
- Others
- QS300 (1995) — music workstation similar to EOSB900, based on QY300+MU50[29]
Arranger Workstations
edit- Tyros series (Combination of the S and SX series) - (Not Continued)
- Tyros (1 May 2002)
- Tyros2 (21 June 2005)
- Tyros3 (17 April 2008)
- Tyros4 (16 June 2010)
- Tyros5 (13 July 2013)
Genos series (The successor series to the Tyros and the original PSR-SX series)
- Genos (31 August 2017)
- Genos 2 (15 November 2023)
- PSR Arranger Workstations (before PSR-S series)
- PSR-1500 (21 January 2004)
- PSR-3000 (21 January 2004)
- PSR-7000 (1995, export model)
- PSR-6000 (1994)
- PSR-5700
- PSR-8000 (8 September 1997, export model)
- PSR-9000 (9 September 1999, export model)
- PSR-9000 Pro (2000, export model)
- PSR-640
- PSR-1000 (2001, export model)
- PSR-740
- PSR-1100 (2002, export model)
- PSR-2000 (2001, export model)
- PSR-2100 (2002, export model)
- PSR-S Series - (S and SX series based on Tyros series)
- PSR-S500 (18 July 2006)
- PSR-S550Si/PSR-S550Bl (April 22 2008) (The S550Si was exported in many countries as a silver version of the Black S550)
- PSR-S650 (13 September 2010)
- PSR-S700 (8 May 2006)
- PSR-S710 (5 February 2009)
- PSR-S900 (8 May 2006)
- PSR-S910 (5 February 2009)
- PSR-S750 (26 April 2012)
- PSR-S950 (26 April 2012)
- PSR-S670 (25 February 2015)
- PSR-S770 (25 February 2015)
- PSR-S970 (25 February 2015)
- PSR-S775 (1 January 2018)
- PSR-S975 (1 January 2018)
PSR-SX Series (The series that replaces the PSR-S series. Uses Genos OS)
- PSR-SX900 - (1 June 2019)
- PSR-SX700 (1 June 2019)
- PSR-SX600 (13 September 2020) - (Successor to the PSR-S670)
- PSR-SX720 (10 September 2024)
- PSR-SX920 - Essentially a Genos 1, but missing 84% of SArt2 (10 September 2024)
Oriental Arranger Workstations
- PSR-A1000 (2002, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-1100)
- PSR-OR700 (2007, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-S700)
- PSR-A2000 (2012, Oriental model and black version of Yamaha PSR S710. And the first A series whose Pitch Band and Modulation uses a Joystick)
- PSR-A3000 (2016, Oriental version based on Yamaha PSR-S770 and first A Series to have multiple colours in the board)
- PSR-A5000 (2021, Oriental version still based on Yamaha PSR-S770 sound library. Expansion memory, Audio styles, same as the Yamaha PSR-SX900)
Workstations
edit- MU5 (1994)
- MU15 (1998)
- QR10 (c. 1993, Music Accompaniment Player with sampler and speaker)
- QY8 (1994)
- QY10 (1990)
- QY20 (1992)
- QY22 (1995)
- QY70 (1997)(AWM2 engine)[30]
- QY100[31] (2000)(AWM2 engine)
- QY300 (c. 1994)
- QY700 (1996)
- V50
Groove machines
edit- AN200 (2001) — desktop module[32] based on PLG150-AN similar to AN1x, with drum sound and step sequencer.
- DX200 (2001) — desktop module based on PLG150-DX compatible with DX7,[33] with additional filter & envelope, drum sounds and step sequencer.
- PSRD1 / PSR
D1-DJX (1998, DJ keyboard)
- DJX-II / DJX-IIB (2000, DJ keyboard/DJ groove machine)
- RM1x (1998)
- RS7000 (2001)[34]
- RX5 (1986)
- RX7 (1987)
Drum machines
edit- RX series
- RX5 (1986)
- RX7 (1987)
- RX8 (1988, 43 samples)
- RX11 (1984)
- RX15 (1984)
- RX17 (1987)
- RX21 / RX21L (1985, L = Latin percussion)
- RX120 (1988, 38 samples)
- RY series
- RY8 (1994)
- RY9 (1999)
- RY10 (1992)[35]
- RY20 (1994)
- RY30 (1991, AWM2(16bit PCM))
- RM series
- RM50[36] (1993) - drum sound module
- MR series
- MR10 (1983)
- DD series
- DD5 (c. 1989)[37]
- DD10
- PTX series
- PTX8 (1986) Percussion Tone Generator
- TXM series
- TMX (1992) Drum Trigger Module
Samplers
edit- TX16W (1987)
- VSS series (mini keyboard)
- A series (rack mount)
- A3000 / A3000 ver.2 (1997)
- A4000 (1999)
- A5000 (1999)
- A7000 / A7000 ver.2 (1995)
- SU series (desktop module)
- SU10 (1995)
- SU200 (2000)
- SU700 (1998)
Sound modules
edit- Sound modules that do not fit into other categories
- CBX-T3 — General MIDI and other modes supported (same as TG100, but with LEDs instead of LCD)
- FB-01 — (1986) 4op FM/8 multi-timbral sound module, suitable for CX5M system. a forerunner of TG & MU series
- FS1R (1998) — FM/Formant synthesis
- TG100 (1991) — General MIDI sound module[38]
- TG300 / TG300GRAY (1993/1994) — PCM,[39] GS compatible
- TG500 (1992)
- TX1P (1987, piano)
XG sound modules
edit- MU series
- MU5 (1994)
- MU10 (1996)
- MU15 (1995)
- MU50 (1995, half-rack unit)
- MU80 (1994/1996)
- MU90/ MU90R / MU90B
- MU100 / MU100R / MU100B / MU100BS (1997/?/1998/1999)
- MU128 (1998)
- MU500 (2000)
- MU1000 (1999)
- MU2000 / MU2000EX (1999/)
Plug-in sound boards
edit- DB50XG (1995) — XG sound daughter-board for Wave Blaster port
- DB51XG (1998?) — XG sound daughter-board for Wave Blaster port, smaller footprint than DB50XG, main processor is XU94700 (a very big chip)
- DB60XG (?) — XG sound daughter-board for Wave Blaster port with audio-in (like SW60XG), only for Japan
- NEC XR385 (?) — OEM/Licensed? XG sound board for (unknown) karaoke machine, audio inputs are suitable for microphone instead of line levels
- Modular Synthesis Plug-in System
- MSPS plug-in sound board, supported by Motif series, MU series, S series, CS6x/CS6R, etc..[40]
- PLG150-AN — Analog physical modeling synthesis, similar to AN1x
- PLG150-AP — sampling grand piano, based on Yamaha NEW CFIIIS
- PLG150-DR — drum sound, equivalent to drum part of Motif
- PLG100-DX — plug-in board version of DX7
- PLG150-DX — successor of PLG100-DX, compatible with DX7
- PLG150-PC — percussion sound, based on Latin Groove Factory/Q Up Arts
- PLG150-PF — PCM piano sound
- PLG150-SG — formant synging synthesizer, forerunner of Vocaloid[41]
- PLG100-VH — vocoder / harmonizer board
- PLG100-VL — plug-in board version of VL70m
- PLG150-VL — successor of PLG100-VL, similar to VA algorithm on EX5
- PLG100-XG — XG sound, based on MU50/MU100
- SW60XG (1996), an ISA version
Software synthesizers
edit- BODiBEAT
- MIDPLUG (1997)
- S-YG20
- S-YXG50 (1997)
- S-YXG70
- S-YXG100
- S-YXG100 PVL
- VOCALOID
- VOCALOID2
- VOCALOID3
- VOCALOID4
MIDI controllers
edit- KX series
- KX25 (2008)
- KX49 (2008)
- KX61 (2008)
- KX8 (2008, GHS action)
- KX76 (1985, initial/after touch)
- KX88 (1984, piano touch, initial/after touch)
- CBX series
- CBX-K1 / CBX-K1XG (1995, XG = XG sound)
- CBX-K2 (1998)
- CBX-K3 (1993)
Keytars
edit- CS-01 (1982, shoulder analog synth with breath controller)
- KX-1 (1983)
- KX-5 (1984)
- SHS-10[R][S][B] (1987/1988, FM & MIDI, similar to PSS-390, R = red, S = silver, B = black (1988))[42]
- SHS-200 (1988)
Guitar synthesizers
edit- G10 (1988, guitar MIDI Controller (using super sonic sensor)/Sound module, compatible with TX802/TX81Z)
- G1D (1996, HEX pickup)
- G50 (1996, guitar MIDI converter for G1D/B1D/B5D)
- B1D / B5D (1997/?, bass HEX pickup)
- EZ series guitar style
- EZ-EG (2002 or 2003, EZ series, electric guitar style, 6strings, 12frets)
- EZ-AG (2003 or 2005, EZ series, acoustic guitar style, 6strings, 12frets)
Wind controllers
editWX series
edit- WX5 (1998)
- WX7 (1987)
- WX11 / WT11 (1989, Wind controller/sound module)
This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2020) |
The Yamaha WX5, WX11, and WX7 are models of monophonic MIDI wind controller musical instruments manufactured by the Yamaha Corporation that have since been discontinued. The fingering system is based on the saxophone basic fingering. Like a keyboard controller, wind controllers send MIDI note information electronically to an external sound module or tone generator which in turn synthesizes a tremendous variety of musical tones. Unlike a keyboard controller which is usually polyphonic, a wind controller is monophonic. The only limits to the kinds of sounds available are the limitations of the external module/tone generator, not the WX5 itself. A WX5 performer can sound like any melodic instrument: wind, string, percussion, keyboard, or purely electronic, including special sound effects. In addition most tone generators a mix of instruments can be programmed.
The WX5 wind controller simulates a wind instrument because of the way it is played, the key layout, and because it responds to breath (wind) pressure as well as lip pressure on a simulated reed mouthpiece similar to that of a saxophone or clarinet. The wind and lip pressure information is converted to MIDI data which is interpreted by the external sound module. Usually the wind pressure is interpreted as loudness and lip pressure is interpreted as pitch bend; thus, the instrument responds much like an acoustic wind instrument and extremely realistic musical phrasing is available to the player.
The WX5 has a 16-key layout similar to a standard saxophone. It also includes a built-in MIDI output connector, a dedicated connector and cable for direct connections to Yamaha WX-Series tone generators, a high-resolution wind sensor, and a thumb-controlled pitch bend wheel. Yamaha recommend that this device be used with the Yamaha VL70m Virtual Acoustic Tone Generator.
The WX7 was the first model that Yamaha produced, beginning in 1987.[43] This was followed by the WX11 in 1993,[44] and then the WX5 in 1999—2001.[45] The WX5 was discontinued in October 2017.[46]
Note: the 1993 date for introduction of the WX11 is in doubt. On the 1991 CD release "Love In" by the Australian band "The Freaked Out Flower Children" (Discogs: https://www.discogs.com/release/4281005) Sophie Lee is credited as playing the WX11.
=References=
editEZ series wind instruments
edit- EZ-TP (2004, EZ series, trumpet style, 3valves)
Breath controllers
edit- BC2
- BC3
Tenori-on
edit- TNR-W (2008, white LED buttons)
- TNR-O (2009, orange LED buttons)
Wearable Instruments
edit- Miburi (1995)
Interfaces
editMIDI interfaces
edit- UX16
- UX96
- UX256
- MI-3100 for the Toshiba 3100
MIDI effects
edit- MEP4 (c. 1988) MIDI Event Processor[47]
MLAN
edit- mLAN8P
- mLAN8E
- mLAN16E
- mLAN-EX
- i88X
Music sequencers
edit- QX1 (1984)
- QX3 (1987)
- QX5 / QX5FD (1986/1988 or 1989)
- QX7 (1985)
- QX21 (1985)
Music data recorders
edit- Data recorders for player pianos, digital pianos, Electones, and more
- MDF series
- MIDI Data Filer
- MDF1 (1986, media: 2.8-inch Quick Disk)
- MDF2 (media: 3.5-inch 2D FD)
- MDF3 (media: 3.5-inch 2HD FD)
- DSR series
- DSR-1 (1987, digital sequencer recorder)
- MDR series
- MDR-1
- MDR3
- MDR4
- MDR-10
Music data player
edit- MDP-30 (2008, music data player for accompaniment/lesson, PCM sound:XG/GM2/GS, USB memory/USB FDD ready)
Music computers
edit- C1 / C1/20 (1987) — IBM PC compatible laptop PC for music production (i286@10 MHz), with 8 MIDI ports and Voyetra sequencer. /20 = 20M HD
- CX5M / CX5F (1984) — MSX computer for music production, with SFG-01 FM synthesizer unit including MIDI I/O
- CX7M/128 (1985)— successor of CX5M, MSX2 version, with SFG-05 FM synthesizer unit
Music software
edit- MA-63W (1999, XGworks V3.0 for windows 95/98)
Computer music packages
edit- Hello! Music!
- computer music packages comprises CBX hardware and software (XGworks, etc.)
- CBX-101 (1992)
- CBX-201 (1992)
- CBX-302 (1993)
- CBX-S3 (1993, stereo speaker)
- CBX-T3 (1993, tone generator with MIDI I/F)
- CBX-PCC10 (1996, unknown)
Classroom keyboards
edit- SY20 (1982, ensemble synthesizer for classroom)
- SDX27S (1986, classroom version of DX27S)
- Hello! Music! for Education
- SDX-2000 (1989, classroom keyboard based on EOS B200)
- SDX-3000 (1995, classroom keyboard based on EOS B900)
- SDX-4000 (classroom keyboard based on MO6S)
- TYU series
- Music Card ROM cartridge & LED key guide
- TYU-30 Fun-Keyboard (mini KB, squarewave tone)[42]
- TYU-40 (mini KB, squarewave tone, pitchbender & microphone)[42]
PortaSound
edit- PS-1 / PS-2[42] / PS-3 (1980, mini KB)
- PS-10 / PS-20[42] / PS-30[42] / PS-30B (1981/1982, 44-48key)
- PS-300 / PS-400 (1982, mini KB)
- MP-1 (1982, mini KB, with built-in musical score printer)[42]
- PS-25 / PS-35 / PS-35S (1983, S = Silver)
- PS-55 / PS-55S (1983, stereo, S=Silver (colour), CPU Intel 8085, Waveform Synth IG09510)[48]
- MK-100 (1983, mini KB, digital sound)[42]
- PS-200 (1984, mini KB)
- PS-6100 (1984)
PortaSound PlayCard series
edit- PlayCard music card reader models
- PC-50 (1983, mini KB)
- PC-100 (1982, mini KB)[42]
- PC-1000 (1983)
- PCS-30[42] / PCS-500[42] (1984)
- PCR-800 (1985)
PortaSound PSS series
edit
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HandySound
editPortaTone
editPortaTone DSR series
edit- DSR-500 (1988)
- DSR-1000 (c. 1987)
- DSR-2000 (c. 1987)[51]
PortaTone PSR series
edit- PSR
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- PSR-E
- PSR-E203 (2005)
- PSR-E213 (2007)
- PSR-E223 (2009
- PSR-E233 (2011)
- PSR-E243 (2013)
- PSR-E253 (2015)
- PSR-E263 (2017)
- PSR-E273 (2020)
- PSR-E283 (2024)
- PSR-E303 (2005)
- PSR-E313 (2007)
- PSR-E323 (2009)
- PSR-E333 (2011)
- PSR-E343 (2013)
- PSR-E353 (2015)
- PSR-E363 (2017)
- PSR-E373 / PSR-EW310 (2020)
- PSR-E383 / PSR-EW320 (2024)
- PSR-E403 (2005)
- PSR-E413 (2007)
- PSR-E423 (2009, with touch response)
- PSR-E433 (2011)
- PSR-E443 (2013)
- PSR-E453 / PSR-EW400 (2015, Stadium Rock is first style, SurfRock, BeachRock, CanadianRock, ChartPianoPop, 70sRock added in 8Beat, New Style Collection is Movie & Show and 38 styles including WildWest, Showtune and TapDanceSwing, etc. in Movie & Show and Another Style collection is Entertainer and 34 styles in Entertainer)
- PSR-E463 / PSR-EW410 (2017, 758 high-quality voices with 1 sample voice for sampling, 235 styles, 30 built-in songs, 10 user songs, 8 banks with 4 registrations, and groove generator) The EW410 offers 76 keys and features phono jacks for connecting external powered speakers. The E463 has 61 keys.
- PSR-E473 / PSR-EW425 (2021, 820 high-quality voices with Super Articulation Lite and 1 sample voice for sampling, 290 styles,30 built-in songs, 10 user songs, 8 banks with 4 registrations, and groove generator) The EW425 offers 76 keys and features phono jacks for connecting external powered speakers. The E473 has 61 keys.
- PSR others
- PSR-I400 (2019, with Indian styles)
- PSR-I500 (10 April 2018, with Indian styles)
- PSR-I455 (28 December 2011, with Indian styles)
- PSR-I425 (18 May 2007, with touch response)
- PSR-A3 (1995, with Arabic Scale)
- PSR-D1 / PSRD1-DJX (1998, DJ keyboard)
- PSR-GX76 (2000, export model, with Portable Grand)
- PSR-K1 (6 February 2003, with Karaoke function and built-in microphone)
- PSR-F50/PSR-F51/PSR-F52
- EOS series (including YS/SDX/TQ)
- EOS YS100 / YS100 (1988, easy operating FM synth, 4op FM/8 muti-timbral)[29]
- EOS YS200 / YS200 / TQ5 (1988, YS100 with 8track sequencer, TQ = desktop module version)[29]
- EOS DS55 (c. 1988)
- EOS B200 / SDX-2000 (1988/1989, SDX = classroom keyboard)[29]
- EOS B500 (1990)
- EOS B700 (1993, minor change of B500)
- EOS B900 / SDX-3000 (1995/1995, floppy disk, SDX = classroom keyboard)
- EOS B900EX (1996, minor change of B900, with blue body and USB)
- EOS B2000 / EOS B2000W (1998, with sequencer similar to QY700, sampling similar to SU10, W = white)
- EOS BX (2001, produced by Daisuke Asakura, based on S03 with USB)
EZ series
edit- PSR-J/EZ series keyboard
- EZ-J14 (2003)
- EZ-J15 (2005)
- EZ20 (2001, export model)
- PSR-J20 / PSR-J20C (1999)
- PSR-J21 (2000)
- EZ-J22 (2001)
- EZ-J23 (2002, silver & pink)
- EZ-J24 (2003)
- EZ-J25 (2005)
- EZ-30 (26 January 2001, export model)
- EZ-300 (2020)
- EZ-310 (2024)
- PSR-J51 (2000)
- EZ-J53 (2002)
- EZ-150 (2003, export model)
- EZ-200 / EZ-J200 (18 January 2007)
- EZ-220 (20 February 2012)
- EZ-J210 (2009)
- EZ-250i (17 March 2003, export model, bundled Konami Keyboard Mania)
Silent instruments
editElectric violins
edit- YSV-104
- SV-120 (discontinued)
- SV-130 (discontinued)
- SV-150 (discontinued)
- SV-200 (discontinued)
- EV-204 (discontinued)
- EV-205 (discontinued)
- SV-250
- SV-255
Electric violas
edit- SVV-200SK
Electric cellos
edit- SVC-50SK
- SVC-100 (discontinued)
- SVC-110SK
- SVC-200SK
- SVC-210SK
Electric upright basses
edit- SLB-100SK
- SLB-200SK
- SLB-200LTD
- SLB300
Guitars
editAcoustic guitars
editF310
Classical guitars
edit- Concert Classic[54]
- GC-3 (c. 1967)
- GC-5 (c. 1967) Solid cedar top, laminate rosewood back and sides
- GC-7 (c. 1967) Solid cedar top, laminate rosewood back and sides
- GC-10 (c. 1967) Solid cedar top, Solid rosewood back and sides
- gc 60 (c. 1968)
- Concert Classic 80 (c. 1968)
- Concert Classic 100 (c. 1968)
- Concert Classic 120 (c. 1968)
- Concert Classic 150 (c. 1968)
- Flamenco series
- GC-5F (c. 1968)
- GC-7F (c. 1968)
- GC-10F (c. 1968)
- Custom Classical guitars
- GC-30A (c. 1974)
- GC-30B (c. 1974)
- GC-30C (c. 1974)
- C series
- (S = small body model)
- C-30S (c. 1984, small body)
- C40
- C-50S (c. 1984, small body)
- C-170A (c. 1984)
- C-200A (c. 1984)
- C-250A (c. 1984)
- C-300A (c. 1984)
- C-400A (c. 1984)
- C-530 (c. 1988)
- Grand Concert Classic
- CG-150 (c. 1968)[54]
- CG-180SA (c. 1966)
- CG series
- CG-100A
- CG-101A
- CG-120
- CG-120A
- CG-151
- CG-171SF
- GD series
- GD-10[C] (1990)
- GD-20[C] (1990)
- GD-20[E][CE] (1992)
- G series
- Model Years MSR Description
- G50A 1969-72 $69.50
- G-60 1970- $59.00 Two-piece spruce top, maple back and sides, rosewood fingerboard and bridge, length 39+1⁄4 inches, width 14+1⁄2 inches
- G60A 1969-73 $79.50
- G65A 1972-74 $95.50
- G70A 1969-$72 --.--
- G-80 1970- (1970 price $69.00) Two-piece spruce top, maple back and sides, rosewood fingerboard and bridge, nineteen nickel silver frets, length 39+1⁄4 inches, width 14+1⁄2inches
- G80A 1969-74 $75.00
- G85A 1970-72 $89.50
- G90A 1967-74 $125.50
- G-100 1967-76 (1970 price $79.00) Two-piece spruce top, maple back and sides, rosewood fingerboard and bridge with nineteen nickel silver frets, length 39+1⁄4 inches, width 14+1⁄2 inches
- G100A 1970-72 $99.50
- G-120 1970- (1970 price $89.00) Two-piece spruce top, curly maple back and sides, mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard and bridge, length 39+1⁄4 inches, width 14+1⁄2 inches
- G120A 1970-76 $142.50
- G130A 1969-76 $119.50
- G150A 1970-76 $166.50
- G-160 1970-1977-? (1970 price $109.00) Two-piece spruce top, rosewood back and sides, mahogany neck, nineteen nickel silver frets, six color wood marquetry around soundhole, length 39+1⁄4 inches, width 14+1⁄2 inches, 36-inch scale [55]
- G280A 1972-74 $300
- G231S 1978-80 Spruce top, laminate mahogany back and sides, rosewood fretboard and bridge, nut width 2 inches - 51 mm
- G-245S 1977-81 $265.00 Solid spruce top, laminate rosewood back and sides, rosewood fretboard and bridge, Nato neck 658 mm scale
- G-245Sii 1981-$1985 --.--
- G-250S 1977-1981 $290 Solid spruce top/quarter sawn, real wood marquetry rosette, triple laminated veneer head, Ebony fingerboard, rosewood back and sides, rosewood bridge, transverse fan type bracing, concert scale size of 260mm with a 52mm nut width
- G255S 1977-81 $360.00 Solid spruce top/quarter sawn, real wood marquetry rosette, triple laminated veneer head, Ebony fingerboard, rosewood back and sides, Jacaranda bridge, transverse fan type bracing, concert scale size of 260mm with a 52mm nut width
- G255Sii 1981-85 $375.00 Solid cedar top
- G-260S 1981-$85 xxx.xx Concert guitar laminated back/sides
Steel and nylon string option guitars
edit- No. 30 (1950s)
- No. 50 (1950s)
- No. 70 (c. 1958)
- No. 1 / No. 1A / No. 1B (c. 1958)
- No. 2 (c. 1958 or 1961)
- No. 4 (1950s/1960s[60])
- No. 8 (c. 1958)
- No. 10A / No. 10B (before 1963)
- No. 15 (before 1963)
- No. 20 / No. 20A (before 1963/after 1963)
- No. 40 (c. 1958)
- No. 80 (before 1963)
- S-20[61]
- S50 / S-50 (after 1963)
- S70 / S-70 (after 1963)
- No. 25 (c. 1964)
- No. 45 (c. 1964)
- No. 60 (c. 1964)
- No. 85 (c. 1964)
- No.100 (c. 1967)
- No. 120 (c. 1964)
- No. 300 (c. 1964)
Steel-string acoustic guitars
edit- F series
- F-310
- F-315
- F-325
- F-335 TBS
- F-370
- F-D01
- FD01S
- F-D02
- FG series
- label colors: R,R2:red label, G,G2:green label, B:black label
- body shapes: folk / '68jumbo / jumbo / new jumbo / HQ jumbo / yamaha jumbo / semi-jumbo / western / yamaha western
- FG-75 (c. 1969R2, slightly small (length 40 inches))
- FG-75 1
- FG-110 (c. 1968R, folk)[54]
- FG-120F (1974/1975 size 00 Black Label)
- FG-130 (1972G, folk)
- FG-140 (c. 1969R, '68jumbo)
- FG-150 / FG-150F (c. 1968R/1974B, folk)[54]
- FG-151 / FG-151B (1976/1978, western)
- FG-152 (1976, folk)
- FG-160 (1972G, jumbo)
- FG-170 (1972G, folk)
- FG-180 (c. 1968R, '68jumbo)[54]
- FG-180J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-200 / FG-200J (1972G/1974B, jumbo)
- FG-200F (1974B, folk)
- FG-200D (1981, yamaha western)
- FG-201 / FG-201B (1976/1978, western)
- FG-202 / FG-202B / FG-202D (1976/1978/1981, folk)
- FG-220 (c. 1969R2, '68jumbo)
- FG-230 (c. 1968R, 12strings '68jumbo)[54]
- FG-240 (1972G, jumbo)
- FG-250 / FG-250F (1972G/1974B, folk)
- FG-250J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-250D / FG-250M / FG-250S (1981/1984, yamaha western, M = mahogany side & back, S = sunburst)
- FG12-250 (1981, 12strings yamaha western)
- FG-251 / FG-251B (1976/1978, western)
- FG-252 / FG-252B / FG-252D / FG-252C (1976/1978/1981/1984, folk)
- FG-260 (1972G, 12strings jumbo)
- FG-280 (c. 1969R2/1972G, '68jumbo)
- FG-300 (c. 1969R2, '68jumbo)
- FG-300J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-300N (1974/1975, jumbo, N = jacaranda sides & back)
- FG-300D / FG-300DE (1981, yamaha western, E = 2way piezo electric)
- FG-300S / FG-300M (1981/1984, yamaha western, S = sunburst, M = mahogany side & back)
- FG-12-300 (1974B, 12strings jumbo)
- FG-301 / FG-301B (1976/1978, western)
- FG12-301 / FG12-301B (1976/1980, 12strings western)
- FG-302 / FG-302B / FG-302D / FG-302C (1976/1978/1981/1984, folk)
- FG-303 / FG-303E (1981, semi-jumbo, E = 2way piezo electric)
- FG-310
- FG-325
- FG-331
- FG-332
- FG-335
- FG-335 II
- FG-340 (1972G, folk)
- FG-340 II (1981–85, western)
- FG-345 II (1981-1985)
- FG-350 (c. 1969R, '68jumbo)
- FG-350F (1974B, fork)
- FG-350J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-350E (1972G2, western style jumbo, E = magnetic electric (Gibson J-160E style))
- FG-350D (1981, yamaha western)
- FG12-350 (1981, 12strings yamaha western)
- FG-351 / FG-351B (1976/1978, western)
- FG-360 (1972G, jumbo)
- FG-400
- FG-400J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-400W (1974B, western style jumbo)
- FG-400D / FG-400S / FG-400M (1981/1981/1984, yamaha western, S = sunburst, M = mahogany side & back)
- FG-401
- FG-401B (1978, western)
- FG-401W / FG-401WB (1976/1980, western, western style)
- FG-402 /FG-402B / FG-402C (1976/1978/1984, folk)
- FG-403 (1981, semi-jumbo)
- FG-410A
- FG-411S
- FG-412 BL
- FG-420
- FG-420A
- FG-420-12A (12 String)
- FG-430
- FG-440 (1972G, folk)
- FG-441
- FG-450 (1972G, jumbo)
- FG-450E (1974B, western style jumbo, E = magnetic electric (J-160E style))
- FG-455
- FG-460-12 (12 string)
- FG-461
- FG-500 (c. 1969R, '68jumbo)
- FG-500F (1974B, folk)
- FG-500J (1974B, jumbo)
- FG-500S (1981, yamaha western, S = sunburst)
- FG-550 (c. 1969R, 12strings '68jumbo)
- FG-580 (1972G2, new jumbo)
- FG-600S (1972G2, folk, western style, S = sunburst)
- FG-600J (1974B, HQ jumbo)
- FG-612S (1981-1985, 12strings)
- FG-630 (1972G2, 12strings new jumbo)
- FG-700 (1972G2, new jumbo)
- FG-700S (1974B, western style jumbo, S = sunburst)
- FG-720S
- FG-720S-12 (12strings)
- FG-730S
- FG-750S
- FG-800J (1974B, HQ jumbo)
- FG-12-800 (1974B, 12strings HQ jumbo)
- FG-850 (1972G2, new jumbo)
- FG-1000 (1972G2, new jumbo)
- FG-1000J (1974B, HQ jumbo)
- FG-1200J (1974B, HQ jumbo)
- FG-1200S / FG-1200SN (1974, western style jumbo (Gibson Dove style), S = sunburst, SN = natural)
- FG-1500 (1972G2, folk)
- FG-2000 (1972G2, new jumbo)
- FG-2500 (1972G2, 12strings new jumbo)
- FX series
- FX-170A (1984, yamaha jumbo, limited entry model)
- L series
- (finishes: S,S* = sunburst, T = satin wood color ?)
- E = electric acoustic model with piezo pickup systems:
- E in 1980: piezo pickup (bar type under saddle) + 3 controls (bass, treble, volume)
- E in 1981: 2way piezo pickups (bar type under saddle & dot type under lower end-pin) + 3 or 4 controls (bass, treble, volume, and mix (PMSII on L-10E))
- L-5 / L-5S / L-5T (1976/1976/1984)
- L-5A (1978-1984)
- L-5ES / L-5E / L-5SE (1980/1981, yamaha western, ES = piezo electric, E/SE = 2way piezo electric)
- L12-5 / L12-5A (1976/1980, 12strings yamaha western)
- L-6 (1976, yamaha western)
- L12-6 / L12-6E (1981, 12strings yamaha western, E = 2way piezo electric)
- L-7S (1976, yamaha western, western style (Gibson Dove style))
- L-8 / L-8S (1976/1981, yamaha western)
- L12-8 / L12-8A (1976/1980, 12strings yamaha western)
- L-10 / L-10S / L-10T (1976/1976/1984, yamaha western)
- L-10ES / L-10E (1980/1981, yamaha western, ES = piezo electric + sunburst, E = 2way piezo electric + 4way controls (PMS II))
- L-12S / L-12SN (1976, yamaha western, western style (Gibson Dove style), S = sunburst, SN = natural)
- L-15 (1976/1980, yamaha western/yamaha jumbo)
- L-21A (1984, jumbo, A = old finish)
- L-31 / L-31A (1974/1978, HQ jumbo/yamaha jumbo, A = old finish)
- L-41 (1980, yamaha western)
- L series custom made
- L12-50 Custom (1980, 12strings yamaha jumbo)
- L-51 (1974, custom I/custom A)
- L-52 / CJ-52 Custom (1974/1980, custom II/custom B/country jumbo (Gibson Everly Brothers style))
- L-53 (1974, custom III/custom C)
- L-53 Custom (1980, yamaha jumbo)
- L-54 (1974, custom IV/custom D, western style (Gibson Dove style))
- L-55 Custom (1980, yamaha jumbo)
- LA series
- luxury artist model, based on L series (original LA shape)
- LA-17 (1984)
- LA-27 (1984)
- LA-37 (1984)
- LA12-37 (1984, 12strings)
- LA-47 (1984)
- LA-57 Custom (1984)
- LJ series
- LJ6 (China)
- LJ16 (China)
- LJ26 (Japan)
- LJ36 (Japan)
- LL series
- LL6, LLX6 (China, X = electric)
- LL16, LLX16, LLX16C (China, X = electric, C = cutaway)
- LL26, LLX26C (Japan, X = electric, C = cutaway)
- LL36, LLX36C (Japan, X = electric, C = cutaway)
- LS series
- LS6 (China)
- LS16 (China)
- LS26 (Japan)
- LS36 (Japan)
- CJ series
- Yamaha original country jumbo (Gibson J-200 style)
- CJ-7 (1978–1983)
- CJ-8XE (1981, Gibson Everly Brothers style, XE = 2way piezo electric)
- CJ-10, CJ-10B (1978–1983, B = brown burst)
- CJ-12 (1993–2007)
- CJ-12P BL (1997–2007)
- CJ-15 / CJ-15B (1978–1983, B = brown burst)
- CJ-22 (1992–2007)
- CJ-32 (1994–2009)
- CJ-52 Custom (1980–1988, Gibson Everly Brothers style)
- CP series
- popular type (classical guitar)
- CP-300 (1978)
- CP-400 (1978)
- CP-500 (1978)
- CWE series
- electric acoustic model with single cutaway, semi-jumbo shallow body, 22 frets, piezo pickup system
- PMS IV: 2way pickup + 4controls
- PMS V: bar piezo + 3controls
- CWE-8 (c. 1984)
- CWE-18 (1984, PMS V)
- CWE-18C (1984, PMS IV, gut string)
- CWE-28 (1984, PMS IV)
- CWE-58 (1984, PMS IV)
- N series
- N500 (1976, yamaha western)
- N700 (1976, yamaha western)
- N1000 (1976, yamaha western)
- S series
- yamaha original semi-jumbo
- S-11 / S-11E (1980/1981, yamaha semi-jumbo, E = 2way piezo electric)
- S-21 (1980, yamaha semi-jumbo)
- S-51 Custom (1980, yamaha semi-jumbo)
- SJ series
- SJ-180 (1981-1985, yamaha semi-jumbo)[62]
- XS series
- yamaha original semi-jumbo, based on CJ-52 Custom/L-52/CJ-8XE line
- XS-16Black (1982, semi-jumbo)
- XS-26E Black (1982, semi-jumbo, E = 2way piezo electric + 4way controls)
- XS-56E Black (1982, semi-jumbo, E = 2way piezo electric + 4way controls (PMS II))
Guitalele
edit- GL-1
- JR1
Silent guitars
edit- SLG-100N
- SLG-100S
- SLG-110N
- SLG-110S
- SLG-130NW
- SLG-200S
- SLG-200N
- SLG-200NW
Electric-acoustic guitars
edit- 5A
- APX series
- CPX series
- FAX
- FGX/FJX
- FX
- LX
- NTX
Electric guitars
edit- AE series
- full hollow body, single cutaway
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- AES series
- thinline hollow body, single cutaway
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- CV series
- CV820WB Wes Borland signature
- EG series
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- ERG series
- ERG-121
- EX series
- Explorer shape
- EX-1 / EX-2 (1985)
- GX series
- headless guitars
- GX1 (1986)
- Pacifica
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- RGX series
- Super Strat type
- RGX110
- RGX120D
- RGX121z
- RGX211
- RGX312
- RGX420DZ
- RGX421D
- RGX512J
- RGX721D
- RGXA2
- RGZ series
- RGZ321P
- SA series
- thinline hollow body, double cutaway
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- SA series (Rickenbacker type)
- semi-acoustic guitars similar to Rickenbacker
- SA-15 / SA-15D (1968)
- SA-RR Custom (1989, with Telecaster bridge)[63]
- SC series
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- SE series
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- Session series
- Session 503 (1985)
- Session 512 (1985)
- Session 520 (1985)
- SF series
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SG series (earlier)
edit- earlier SG series[# 1]
- SG-2 (1966, asymmetrical double cutaway 1)
- SG-3 (1966, asymmetrical double cutaway 2)
- 1966-67 SG reverse cutaway
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- 1968 SG non-reverse cutaway
- SG-2C (1968)
- SG-3C (1968)
- 1972 SG single cutaway
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SGV series
editAsymmetrical double cutaway guitar based on earlier SG-2, 5/5A, 7/7A [see above], manufactured in early 2000s
- SGV-300
- SGV-500
- SGV-700 (Japan only)
- SGV-800 (2000)
- SGV-1200 (Japan only)(2001)
- SGV Blue Jeans (Japan only)
SG series (stable)
edit- 1973-74 SG series (with different pickguard shape)[64]
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- stable SG series (SG-2000 shape)[64]
- SG-175 (1974, 1st model with current SG style)
- SG-175B (1996, Yamaha Electric Guitars 30th Anniversary, with Buddha inlay replicated from Carlos Santana model)
- SG-25S / SG-25T (1991 by Yamaha custom shop, Yamaha Electric Guitars 25th Anniversary, based on SG-3000, S = pearl inlay on the body (hummingbird and floral), T = Takanaka model (tremolo and HSH pickups))
- SG-200 (1978) Yuri Kasparyan
- SG-300
- SG-400 (1976)
- SG-500 / SG-500B (July 1976/?)
- SG-510 (1983)
- SG-600 (1979)
- SG-700 (July 1976)
- SG-710T (1984, tremolo)
- SG-800 (1977)
- SG-800S / SBG-500 (1981/1981 (or 1982), limited 6 colors)
- SG1000 / SG-1000L / SBG-1000 (July 1976–1984/1977/1976–1983 in the US, set-in neck, L = left hand)
- SG-1000N / SG1000-24 (1983, 24 = 24frets)
- SG-1000NW (1984)
- SG-1000S (1976)
- SG-1000X (1981)
- SG-1000XU
- SG-1000XY (1985)
- SG-1300 / SG-1300-24 / SG-1300T (1983, 24 = 24frets, T = tremolo)
- SG-1300TS (1984, tremolo)
- SG-1500 (July 1976–1978(or 1979) in the US, basically same as SG-2000, with dot inlay and chrome hardware)[64]
- SG-1500 (1981 in Japan, different new model)
- SG-1600 (1983)
- SG1802 (2010, Seymour Duncan P-90-3 pickups)[65]
- SG1820 / SG1820A (2010, A = EMG85/81 pickups)[65]
- SG-1966 (1985, Yamaha Shibuya Store 20th Anniversary)
- SG-1996
- SG2000 / SBG-2000 / SG-2000S (July 1976–1988/1980s in US/1980s in UK, carved 3 piece maple top/contoured back, 3 piece neck-through (mahogany/maple/mahogany), brass block under the bridge (for sustain))[64]
- SG2000 Devadip (1976, Devadip Carlos Santana model, with Tennyo inlay, dark green)
- SG-2000MT Masayoshi Takanaka model (1998)
- SG2004 (2003)
- SG2100 / SBG-2100 / SG2100S (1983/1984 in the US/UK)
- SG-2500 (1983 in Japan)
- SG3000 / SBG-3000 (1982/1982 in the US, neck-through)
- SG3000 Custom / SBG-3000 Custom (1982/1982 in the US[64] or c. 1985, neck-through, Mexican abalone purfling to the top)
custome shop SG
edit- SG-I Issei Noro signature (rounded horns)
- SG-T / SG-T2 Masayoshi Takanaka model (1988 (or 1989)/1998, based on SG-3000, with alphabet graphics, tremolo and HSH pickups)[64]
- SG-RR Custom (1989)
- SG-RR Standard (1989, P-90 type pickups, similar to Les Paul Junior DC / Les Paul Special DC)
- SG-RR Junior (1990, P-90 type pickups & Bolt-on neck)
- MSG (1989, rounded horns)
- TSG (1985, Yamaha Electric Guitars 20th Anniversary, asymmetrical rounded horns)
- YSG (1989, asymmetrical double cutaway)
SBG series
edit- renamed SG in the US, 1980s[64] / renewaled SG in Japan, 1998[66][unreliable source?] / reissued SG in the US, ca.2009
- SBG500(1981 (or 1982)-1983 in the US, export version of SG-800S)[64]
- SBG500B
- SBG700 (1978 or 1979 in the US, renamed version of SG-700)[64]
- SBG700S (1999)[64]
- SBG800S (1998)
- SBG1000 (1980s-1983 in the US/1998/c. 2009 30th anniversary handcraft model, renamed version of SG-1000[64])
- SBG1200 (1998)
- SBG1996
- SBG2000 (1980s-1984/1998/c. 2009, renamed version of SG-2000,[64] later reissued as 30th anniversary handcraft model)
- SBG2100 (1984 or 1985, successor of SBG2000 in the US)[64]
- SBG3000 (1982/1998/2009, later reissued as 40th anniversary of Yamaha distribution in the U.S, Limited handcraft edition, only 40 pieces made)
SJ series
edit- similar to Telecaster
- SJ-500 (1978)
- SJ-800 (1978)
SX series
edit- yet another symmetrical double cutaway model
- SX-60
- SX-80
- SX-125
- SX-800A
- SX-800B
- SX-900A
- SX-900B
VX series
edit- Flying V shape
- VX-1 / VX-2 (1985)
Bass guitars
edit- ATTITUDE Limited II Billy Sheehan signature
- BB bass
- (S = short scale ?, L = ?, F = fretless, X = with pickguard)
†: discontinued
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- BEX bass
- BEX-BS Billy Sheehan signature (2002, single cataway semi-acoustic bass, with Art Deco f-hole)
- BX bass
- headless basses
- BX-1 (1985)
- BX-5
- ERB bass
- ERB 070 BP
- ERB 300 2
- EBX bass
- bass guitars with Explorer shape
- EBX-1 (1985)
- Motion bass
- MB-I (1985)
- MB-II (1985)
- MB-III (1985)
- RBX bass
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- SA bass
- bass version of vintage SA series, double cutaway semi-acoustic
- SA-17 (1967)
- SA-70 / SA-70B (1968, B = pearl color)[54]
- SA-75 (1973)
- SB bass
- SB-1C
- SB-2
- SB-2A
- SB-5A
- SB-7A
- SB-30
- SB-50
- SB-55
- SB-70
- SB-75
- SB-500
- SB-500S
- SB-600
- SB-700
- SB-800
- SB-800S
- SB-1200S
- SBV bass
- bass version of BJ-Pro/SG-7AS reissues
- SBV-J1 / SBV-J2 (2004, Hajime Okano produced, J1 = J type pickups / J2 = P type pickups)[63]
- TRB bass
- TRB-1004
- TRB-1005 / TRB-1005F
- TRB-1006
- TRB4
- TRB5
- TRB6
- TRB4II
- TRB5II
- TRB6II
- TRB-5P
- TRB-6P
- TRB-5PII
- TRB-6PII
- TRB-6JP / TRB-6JP2 John Patitucci signature
Guitar effects
edit- Magicstomp Model UB99[69]
- 01 series Professional System Effectors (1980)
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- 10M series[70]
- OD-10M Over Drive
- 10M II series[70]
- CO-10MII Compressor
- GE-10M II Graphic EQ
- 20M series[70]
- DDS-20M Delay Pedal
- DSC-20M Stereo Chorus Pedal
- MDB-20M Multi-band Distortion Pedal
- 100 series (c. 1988)[69]
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- x01 series Professional System Effectors[70]
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Guitar amplifiers
edit- HY-10G / HY-10GIII (40 W?)
- Park G10 (combo, designed by Marshall)
- T50 / T50C (c. 2009, 50 W tube head/combo, designed by Soldano (SLO))
- T100 / T100C (c. 2009, 100 W tube head/combo, designed by Soldano (SLO))
- A line
- AA5 (battery amp, 5 W, for silent guitar)
- BA-15 (bass amp)
- GA-10 (7 W 12 cm)
- GA-15
- VA-5 "Power Boy" (5 W 12 cm)
- VA-7W
- VA-10 (twin 3 W+3 W 2×12 cm))
- R line [71]
- AR-1500 (15 W 8-inch introduced 1990)
- AR-1500 Live / AR-1500R (15 W 8-inch, R = reverb. introduced 1992)[72]
- AR-1500B (15 W 10-inch bass amp introduced 1990)
- AR-2500 (25 W 10-inch introduced 1990)
- AR-2500B (25 W 12-inch bass amp introduced 1990)
- AR-PRO (30 W 10-inch combo)[72]
- HR-1000
- HR-1000B (bass amp)
- HR-1500 (c. 1987, 25 W?)
- HR-1500B (bass amp)
- HR-2000
- HR-2000B (bass amp)
- HR-3000B (bass amp)
- SR50-112 (50 W 12-inch introduced 1994)[73]
- SR100-112 (100 W 12-inch introduced 1994)[73]
- SR100-212 (100 W 2×12-inch introduced 1994)[73]
- SR300G (300 W 4ohm head)[72]
- SR412 (4×12-inch cabinet)[72]
- SR400B (400 W bass head)[72]
- SR215B (2×15-inch bass cabinet)[72]
- SR80B-115 (80 W 15-inch bass amp)
- SR160B-115 (160 W 15-inch bass amp)
- VR4000 (stereo 50 W 2×10-inch)
- VR6000 (stereo 100 W 2×12-inch)
- DG series
- digital modeling amplifier
- DG60-112 / DG60FX-112 / DS60-112 (12-inch, combo / combo with effects / powered cabinet)
- DG80-112A
- DG85
- DG100-212 / DG100-212A (2×12-inch, A = with built-in effects (chorus, tremolo, tape echo))
- DG-1000 (preamp, flagship of DG amp series & DG-STOMP series)
- DS60-112 (12-inch, combo / powered cabinet; similar power circuitry and same Celestion speaker as the DG60-112, but not digital; three band High Mid base EQ, no effects)
- F series (Introduced 1980)[74]
- F-20 (20 W 8-inch introduced 2001)
- F-20FX (FX = stereo effects)
- F-20B (20 W 10-inch bass amp introduced 2001)
- F30R (30 W 10-inch, R = reverb.)
- F50-112 (50 W 12-inch, color:black, gray 1980)
- F50-115B (50 W bass amp, 50 W 15-inch 1980)
- F100-112 (100 W 12-inch, color:black, gray 1980)
- F100-115 (100 W 15-inch 1980)
- F100-115B (100 W bass amp 15-inch 1980)
- F100-212 (100 W 2×12-inch 1980)
- G series (1980s)
Series I Series II 1982 Series III 1985
- G-5 (7 W 6-inch introduced 1982)
- G-10L (7 W 6-inch introduced 1979)
- G-10W (7 W 6-inch introduced 1979)
- G50-112 (50 W, 12-inch)
- G50-410 (50 W, 4×10-inch)
- G100 (100 W head, successor to the J-100)
- G100-112 (100 W, 12-inch)
- G100-115 (100 W, 15-inch)
- G100-210 (100 W, 2×10-inch)
- G100-212 (100 W, 2×12-inch)
- S412 (4×12-inch cabinet to match G100)
- J series (1970s, the combos were replaced by the JX and F series in 1980, the separate heads and cabinets continued into the 1980s)[75]
- J-15 (15 W 12-inch introduced 1979)
- J-25 (30 W 10-inch)
- J-35 (40 W 12-inch)
- J-35B (30 W bass amp 15-inch introduced 1979)
- J-45II (50 W 12-inch)
- J-45B (50 W bass amp 15-inch)
- J-55 (50 W 12-inch)
- J-55B (50 W bass amp 15-inch)
- J-65 (50 W 2×12-inch)
- J-75 (50 W 4×10-inch)
- J-85 (100 W 2×12-inch)
- J-95 (twin)
- J-100 (100 W head)
- J-100B (100 W bass head)
- J-100S (2×12-inch cabinet)
- J-105 (100 W 2 Channel amp 2×12-inch)
- J-110S (15-inch cabinet)
- J-110L (15-inch bass cabinet
- J-115 (100 W 15-inch)
- J-115B (100 W bass amp 15-inch)
- S-115 (bass cabinet for J-115B, 120 W 15-inch)
- J-120L (2×15-inch bass cabinet)
- J-125 (100 W 2 Channel 15-inch)
- J-135 (100 W 4×10-inch)
- J-140S (4×12-inch cabinet)
- J-145 (100 W 4×12-inch)
- J-160S (6×10-inch cabinet)
- JX series (1980s)[74]
- JX15
- JX20 (20 W 10-inch 1980)
- JX25 / JX25B
- JX30 (30 W 12-inch 1980)
- JX30B (30 W bass amp 15-inch 1980)
- JX35B (JX30B with comp)
- JX40 (30 W 12-inch 1980)
- JX50 (50 W 1980)
- JX50B (50 W bass amp 1980)
- JX55 / JX55B
- JX65D (c. 1982, 2×12-inch)
- RA rotary speakers (1970s)
- rotary sound amplifiers which produce Leslie speaker effects by rotating a series of speaker units instead of horns.[# 3] also featuring Yamaha Natural Sound Speaker units
- CSY-2 (1975)[# 4]
- R-60 (a combination of dual 3way normal speakers and dual 2way rotary speakers)[76]
- RA-50 (1970s, single rotary + woofer)[76][# 5]
- RA-70R
- RA-100 (1970s, dual rotary + woofer)[# 6]
- RA-200R (1970s, triple rotary + woofer)[# 7] — David Gilmour (Pink Floyd) used it along with Hiwatt amp between 1976 and 1983.[# 8][# 9]
- TA series (late 1960s)
- wedge-shaped flat amplifiers, featuring Yamaha Natural Sound Speaker units
- TA-20[76]
- TA-30 (c. 1968, 30 W RMS/ 50 W music power)[54][76]
- TA-60 (c. 1968, 60 W RMS/100 W music power)[54][76]
- TA-90 (PE100 head + TS90 cabinet, 90 W RMS)[76]
- VR series (1989–1991) [71]
- VR-3000 (50 W @ 8Ω, 1x12" speaker, dual channel, 1 parametric EQ per channel, reverb)
- VR-4000 (stereo 2×25 W @ 8Ω, 2x10" speakers, dual channel, 1 parametric EQ per channel, reverb, chorus)
- VR-5000 (100 W @ 8Ω, 1x12" speaker, dual channel, 2 parametric EQ per channel, reverb)
- VR-6000 (stereo 2×50 W @ 8Ω, 2x12" speakers, dual channel, 2 parametric EQ per channel, reverb, chorus)
- VR-75B (75 W 15-inch bass amp)
- VR-150B (150 W 15-inch bass amp)
- VX series (red logo)
- VX10 (10 W combo)
- VX15 (10 W combo)
- VX25 (20 W combo)
- VX35 (30 W combo)
- VX25B (30 W combo bass amp)
- VX35B (30 W combo bass amp)
- VX55B (50 W combo bass amp)
- YTA series (1970s, blue line)
- YTA-15A
- YTA-95 (100 W 2×12-inch)
- YTA-110A
- B series bass amps
Series I Series II 1982 Series III 1985
- B50-115 (50 W bass combo)
- B100 (100 W head, successor to the J-100B)
- B100-115 I/II/III (100 W bass combo, 15-inch)
- B100-115SE (100 W bass combo, 15-inch smaller and lighter than the numbered series, 790mm tall and 44 kg, vs 950mm and 52 kg)
- S115 (15-inch bass cabinet to match B100 head)
- S215 (2×15-inch bass cabinet to match B100 head)
- BBT series digital bass amps
- BBT500H (head, 500 W@2Ω)
- BBT210S (cabinet, 2×10-inch)
- BBT410S (cabinet, 4×10-inch)
- BBT500-115 (combo, 500 W 15-inch)
- YBA series (1970s, blue line)
- YBA-45
Power amplifiers
edit- P/PC series power amplifiers
- P2500S
- P7000S
- PC-1002
Keyboard amplifiers
edit- MS101 / MS101-3 (powered monitor, 10 W 4-inch)
- SKS50
Percussion instruments
editTimpani
editAll of the Timpani Models (except 9000) are balanced action.
- TP-3100 (Portable Aluminum Series)
- TP-4200 (Concert Series. Fiberglass)
- TP-6200 (Symphonic Series: Smooth Copper)
- TP-7200 (Hammered Symphonic. 4 mm Suspension Ring for Accurate Tuning)
- TP-9000 (Grand Concert Series: Hammered Copper, Ringer Style. Berlin & Dresden Friction Post, and Berlin Ratchet. Comes with a fine tuner.)
Marimbas
edit- YM-40 (3 1/2 octave Standard Padauk marimba)
- YM-1430 (4 1/3 octave Standard Padauk Marimba)
- YM-2400 (4 1/3 octave intermediate Acoustalon marimba)
- YMRD-2400 (4 1/3 octave Acoustalon Multi-Frame II marimba)
- YMT-2400 (4 1/3 octave Acoustalon Tough-Terrain Frame marimba)
- YMRD-2900A (4 1/2 octave intermediate Acoustalon Multi-Frame II Marimba)
- YM-4600A (4 1/3 octave Professional rosewood Marimba)
- YM-4900A (4 1/2 octave Professional rosewood Marimba)
- YM-5100A (5 Octave Professional rosewood Marimba)
- YM-5104A (5 1/2 octave Custom rosewood Marimba)
- YM-6100 (5 octave Artist(Keiko Abe) Model rosewood Marimba)
Drum kits
editAcoustic drums
edit- Yamaha PHX
- Yamaha Maple Custom Absolute
- Yamaha Birch Custom Absolute
- Yamaha Recording Custom
- Yamaha Rock Tour Custom
- Yamaha Club Custom
- Yamaha Oak Custom
- Yamaha Beech Custom
- Yamaha Tour Custom
- Yamaha Stage Custom
- Yamaha Rock Tour
- Yamaha GigMaker
- Yamaha HipGig
Electronic drums
edit- EPS-1 (1986) PMC1 "Percussion Midi Converter", Pads: PTT1 (toms, snare), and PTB1 (kick). Included DX7 compatible drum Rom cartridge
- EPS-D8 (1986) PTX8 "Percussion Tone Generator", Pads: PTT8 (tom), PSD8 (snare), and PBD8 (kick)
- EP 75 pad (1993)
- KP 75 kick (1993)
- DTX (1996)[77]
- DTXpress (1999)
- DTXpress II / DTXtreme II
- DTXpress III / DTXtreme III (/2008)
- DTXpress IV (2006)
- DTXplorer
- DTX-MULTI 12 (2009, drum pad)
- DTX522K / DTX532K / DTX562K (2013)
- DTX500K / DTX900K (2010, DTX-PAD model)
- DTX550K / DTX950K (2011, DTX-PAD model)
- DD series digital percussion
- DD-3 (1993, 2 pads)
- DD-5 (1988, 4 pads)
- DD-6 / DD-7 (1990/1992, 4 pads)
- DD-10 (1988, 8 mini pads, stereo speaker)
- DD-9/DD-9M (1994, 4 pads)
- DD-11/DD-12/DD-14 (1991/1993, 8 pads)
- DD-20/DD-20S/DD-20C (1995, 4 pads)
- DD-35 (2001, 4 pads)
- DD-45 / YDD-40 (2010 export model)
- DD-50 (1996 export model ?)
- DD-55 / DD-55C (2001/2004, 7 pads)
- DD-65 (2007, 8 pads)
- DD-75 (2016, 8 pads)
Brass instruments
editCornets
edit- YCR-231
- YCR-233
- YCR-2310II
- YCR-2330II
- YCR-2335
- YCR-6330S
- YCR-8335
- YCR-8620S
- YCR-9435
Trumpets
edit- YTR-1310
- YTR-1320se
- YTR-1335
- YTR-232
- YTR-2320
- YTR-2320S
- YTR-2330
- YTR-2335
- YTR-4335G
- YTR-5335GII
- YTR-6335
- YTR-6345G
- YTR-6345HG II
- YTR-6310Z
- YTR-8310Z
- YTR-8335
- YTR-8335RGS
- YTR-8345
- YTR-9335CHS/NYS
- YTR-9445CHS/NYS
- YTR-9636
- YTR-9835
- YTR-988
Trombones
edit- YSL denotes any Alto, Tenor, Compact or Valve trombone
- YBL denotes any Bass trombone
- Dis. = Discontinued Models
Student Range
- YSL-154
- YSL-352 (Dis.)
- YBL-322 (Dis.)
- YSL-354
- YSL-354G
Compact Trombones
- YSL-350C
Valve Trombones
- YSL-354V
Intermediate Trombones
- YSL-445G
- YSL-446G
- YSL-447G
- YSL-448G
- YBL-421G
Professional Trombones
- YSL-610
- YSL-620
- YSL-630
- YSL-640
- YBL-620G
Custom Jazz Trombones
- YSL-691Z (Dis.)
- YSL-697Z (Dis.)
- YSL-891Z
- YSL-897Z
Xeno Trombones
- YSL-881
- YSL-881G
- YSL-882
- YSL-882G
- YSL-882O
- YSL-882GO
- YSL-882OR
- YSL-882GOR
- YBL-822G
- YBL-830
Custom Alto Trombones
- YSL-871
- YSL-872
French horns
edit- YHR-567
- YHR-601
- YHR-667
- YHR-667V
- YHR-668
- YHR-668II
Euphoniums
edit- YEP-201[S]
- YEP-321[S]
- YEP-621[S]
- YEP-642[S]
- YEP-842[S]
Baritone horns
edit- YBH-301S
- YBH-621S
- YBH-301M (Marching Baritone)
Tenor horns
edit- YAH-201
- YAH-202
- YAH-203
- YAH-602
Flugelhorns
edit- YFH-231
- YFH-2310
- YFH-631
- YFH-731
- YFH-631G
- YFH-6310Z
- YFH-731 ( Dis.)
- YFH-8310Z
- YFH-8310G
Tubas
editin BBb
- YBB-103 ( Dis. )
- YBB-321
- YBB-621
- YBB-631S
- YBB-641
- YBB-841
- YBB-105MSWC (3/4 Convertible Tuba)
- YBB-201MSWC (Convertible Tuba)
- YBB-202MWC (Marching Tuba)
in CC
- YCB-621
- YCB-661
- YCB-822
- YCB-826S
in Eb
- YEB-321S
- YEB-632S
in F
- YFB-621
- YFB-821
- YFB-822
Sousaphones
editin BBb
- YSH-301
- YSH-411
Woodwind instruments
editClarinets
editB♭ Clarinets
edit- Advantage
- YCL-20
- YCL-250
- YCL-250S (Silver Plated)
- YCL-251 (Japan import)
- YCL-255
- YCL-26
- YCL-26ii (precursor to YCL-250)
- YCL-34
- YCL-34ii (precursor to YCL-450)
- YCL-34iiS (Silver Plated)
- YCL-450 (Silver Plated)
- YCL-450N (Nickel Plated)
- YCL-550AL
- YCL-62
- YCL-64 (precursor to YCL-650)
- YCL-650
- YCL-SE (custom clarinets starting from this point)
- YCL-CS
- YCL-CX
- YCL-SEV
- YCL-CSV
- YCL-CSG
- YCL-CSG-H
- YCL-CSGII
A Clarinets
edit- YCL-CS-A
- YCL-SE-A
- YCL-CSG-A
- YCL-CSG-AH
- YCL-CSV-A
- YCL-SEV-A
- YCL-CSG-AII
E♭ Clarinets
edit- YCL-881
- YCL-681II
Bass Clarinets
edit- YCL-221II
- YCL-621II
- YCL-622II
Alto Clarinets
edit- YCL-631II
Bassoons
edit- YFG-811
- YFG-812
- YFG-821
Flutes
edit- YFL-A421/B
- YFL-B441
Student Models (Series 200)
editCurrent models
edit- YFL212
- YFL222
- YFL262
- YFL272
- YFL282
Discontinued models
edit- YFL-211
- YFL-221
- YFL-261
- YFL-271
- YFL-281
Intermediate Models (Series 300 and 400)
editCurrent models
edit- YFL312
- YFL322
- YFL362
- YFL372
- YFL382
- YFL412
- YFL422
- YFL462
- YFL472
- YFL482
Discontinued models
edit- YFL311
- YFL321
- YFL361
- YFL371
- YFL381
- YFL411
- YFL421
- YFL461
- YFL471
- YFL481
Student and intermediate models are numbered in one system. The first number shows the material/series; the second shows if there is an offset G and/or a split E, and the type of keys; and the third shows if the flute is the latest or not. Currently, latest models will end with the number 2, but older models may end with the number 1, or 5. Different suffixes mean different things - 'H' means the flute has a B footjoint; 'AL' means the instrument is part of Yamaha's 'Allegro' lineup of instruments; 'U' means the instrument has a curved headjoint; 'GL' and 'SL' signal the material of the lip-plate (being gold and silver respectively); 'HD' means that the instrument is a high durability instrument.
Professional Models (Series 500, 600 and 700)
editCurrent models
edit- YFL517
- YFL577
- YFL587
- YFL597
- YFL617
- YFL677
- YFL687
- YFL697
- YFL717
- YFL777
- YFL787
- YFL797
Discontinued models
edit- YFL514
- YFL574
- YFL584
- YFL594
- YFL614
- YFL674
- YFL684
- YFL694
- YFL714
- YFL774
- YFL784
- YFL794
Handmade Models (Series 800W, 800, 900A, 900B and 900C)
editSeries 800W models
edit- YFL817W
- YFL874W
- YFL894W
Series 800 and 900 Models
editCurrent models:
- YFL817
- YFL877
- YFL887
- YFL897
- YFL917
- YFL977
- YFL987
- YFL997
Discontinued models:
- YFL-874
- YFL-881
- YFL-884
- YFL-892
- YFL-894
Additionally, for Series 600 - 900 flutes, the last number will be seven if it is the latest model. Older models may have a 4, or other numbers. Additional suffixes include (but are not limited to): 'W' meaning the flute is wooden; 'CT' for a C# trill.
For series 900 flutes, the suffixes A, B, and C show how much of the flute is gold.
Piccolos
edit- YPC-30
- YPC-31
- YPC-32
- YPC-61
- YPC-62
- YPC-81
- YPC-82
- YPC-87R
- YPC-91
- YPC-92
Venova
edit- YVS-100
Saxophones
editSoprano saxophones
edit- YSS-475II (intermediate grade instrument. Sold mainly in Europe)
- YSS-61 (Yamaha's first professional-grade soprano saxophone)
- YSS-62 (significantly updated version of YSS-61. Professional-grade instrument)
- YSS-675 (Custom model)
- YSS-875 (Custom model)
- YSS-875EX (Custom model)
- YSS-82Z(R) (One-piece custom model)
Alto saxophones
edit- YAS-21 (Yamaha's first student-grade alto sax)
- YAS 22 (same as 21 body and key work, more copper look lacquer)
- YAS-23 (student-grade instrument which replaced the YAS-21)
- YAS-25 (identical to YAS-23, but has a high F♯ key and improved octave-key mechanism)
- AS-100 (identical to YAS-23. Sold outside Europe & N.America)
- YAS-275 (successor to the YAS-25. Made in Indonesia. Sold mainly in Europe)
- YAS-280 (successor to the YAS-275)
- YAS-31
- YAS-32 (intermediate grade instrument, similar to YAS-52. Superseded by the YAS-475)
- YAS-475 (intermediate grade instrument. Sold mainly in Europe)
- YAS-480 (intermediate grade instrument)
- YAS-52 (intermediate grade instrument. Sold mainly in the USA)
- YAS-61 (Yamaha's first professional-grade alto with purple logo. Has non-ribbed construction and real mother of pearl key-touches)
- YAS-62 (Mk 1 version of YAS-62 with purple logo, ribbed construction and real MOP key-touches)
- YAS-62ll (Mk 2 version with different neck design, slightly different key-work and key-touches are made from plastic)
- YAS-62IlI (Mk 3 version with new style neck design, integrated key posts and other changes)
- YAS-82Z (Custom model)
- YAS-82ZII (Custom model)
- YAS-855 (Custom model)
- YAS-875 (Custom model)
- YAS-875EX (Custom model)
- YAS-875EXW (Custom model)
Tenor saxophones
edit- YTS-21 (Yamaha's first student-grade tenor sax) (Gold and silver color lacquer)
- YTS 22 (almost exact replica of YTS 21 but with pinkish color lacquer)
- YTS-23 (student-grade instrument which replaced the YTS-21)
- YTS-25 (identical to YTS-23, but has a high F♯ key and improved octave-key mechanism)
- TS-100 (identical to YTS-23. Sold outside Europe & N.America)
- YTS-31 (YTS 61 body and keys but no engraving or pearls on F♯s)
- YTS-32 (intermediate grade instrument, similar to YTS-52. Superseded by the YTS-475)
- YTS-52 (intermediate grade instrument. Sold mainly in the USA)
- YTS-275 (successor to the YTS-25. Made in Indonesia)
- YTS-280 (successor to the YTS-275)
- YTS-475 (intermediate grade instrument. Sold mainly in Europe)
- YTS-480
- YTS-61 (Yamaha's first professional-grade tenor sax)
- YTS-62 (Mk 1 version of YTS-62 with purple logo and real mother of pearl key-touches)
- YTS-62II (Mk 2 version with different neck design and key-touches are made from plastic)
- YTS-62III (Mk 3 version with different neck design)
- YTS-82Z (Custom model)
- YTS-855 (Custom model)
- YTS-875 (Custom model)
- YTS-875EX (Custom model)
Baritone saxophones
edit- YBS-32 (intermediate grade instrument)
- YBS-52
- YBS-61 (Yamaha's first professional-grade baritone sax)
- YBS-62
- YBS-62II
- YBS-82
Musical Sirens
editBetween 1950 and 1998, the Yamaha Corporation produced a form of outdoor warning siren which was designed to play music, rather than alert the public of danger. Using several mechanical sirens tuned to a specific octave, the siren would use either electromagnetic or solenoid-driven sliding dampers which would open to allow air to enter each siren to play a musical note, or close to silence each siren. The musical sirens could be played directly with a keyboard located in a control station, or played automatically through a music box-like mechanism. There were two distinct generations produced, with the first being a 5-meter long siren with 10 siren units on a common driveshaft, and the second being a vertical unit inside of a box, which contained the siren units and had two shafts connected through belts to make it more compact. These could be controlled through a MIDI controller, instead of the music box system. These were created by the president of Yamaha at the time to harness the sheer sound output of a siren to play music, and to ease the fears and memory of war and air raids for the public. These sirens became "symbols of peace" and were widely installed on department stores and city halls. Production ended on these sirens in 1998, with Yamaha ceasing support for them in 2011. Most of these musical sirens have been decommissioned as parts became scarce or unavailable, although some units remain in service today.[78]
Audio
editMusic production
editRecorders
editDigital mixing studio
edit- n12 / n8 (2007)
- MW8CX / MW10C / MW12C / MW12CX (2007)
- MW10 / MW12 (2006)
- 01X (2003)
- DSP Factory DS2416 (digital mixing card (PCI) for PC/Mac, based on 02R)
Audio workstations
edit- AW1600 (2005, 24bit/16tr(8rec)/36in mixer)
- AW2400 (2005, 24bit/24tr(12rec)/48in mixer)
- AW16G (2002, 24bit/16tr(8rec)/36ch mixer)
- AW2816 (2001, 24bit/16tr/28ch mixer)
- AW4416 (2000, 24bit/16tr/44ch mixer)
- D24 (1998, 24bit/8tr rackmount)
Multitrack recorders
edit- multitrack recorders for music creation[79]
- DMR8 (1991/2 digital multitrack recorder/8mm tape/20-bit/stationary head)
- DRU8 (1990, 8tr/original 8mm dat)
- MD series (MiniDisc)
- MD4 / MD4S (1996/1999)
- MD8 (1998)
- CMX series (Compact Cassette)
- CMX1 (1985)
- CMX3 (1988)
- CMX100 / CMX100II / CMX100III (1988/1989/1991)
- MT series (Compact Cassette)
- MT1X (1998)
- MT2X (1998-1999)
- MT4X (1999) (correct year, was 1994)
- MT8X (1999)
- MT8X II (2000)
- MT44 / MT44D (1982/1984)
- MT50 (1994)
- MT-100 (1988)
- MT120 / MT120S (1991)
- MT400 (1999)
Pocket recorders
edit- Voice recorder type
- Pocketrak CX / C24 / W24 (2008/2010)
Audio interfaces
edit- AG03 / AG06 (2015, USB)
- AUDIOGRAM3 / AUDIOGRAM6 (2008, USB)
- CBX-D3 (1995, 4tr/2rec, SCSI)
- CBX-D5 (1993)
- GO44 / GO46 (FireWire)
- SW1000XG (1998, PCI sound card with XG)
- Sound Edge SW20 PC (1995, ISA sound card using OPTi MediaChips, Analog Devices SoundPort, and Yamaha YMF278)
- UW10 (USB)
- UW500 (USB)
- A/D converters
- AD808 (1988, A/D)
- AD2X (1990, A/D)
- AD8X (1990, A/D & S/PDIF converter)[# 10]
- D/A converters
- DA8X (1990, D/A & S/PDIF converter)
- DA202 (1988, D/A)
- DA824 (1990, D/A)
- Other converters
- FMC8 (1991 - format converter Yamaha to Sony or Melco (ProDigi) format)
Pro audio
editMixing consoles
editDigital mixing consoles
edit- PM7 (Rivage) (2018)
- TF1/TF3/TF5 (2016)
- PM10 (Rivage) (2016)
- QL1 /QL5 (2014)
- CL1/CL3/CL5 (2012)[80]
- M7CL (2005/2010)
- LS9 (2006)
- PM1D (2001)
- PM5D (2004)
- DM2000 (2002)
- DM1000 (2003)
- IMX644 (2009, digital installation mixer)
- 03D (1997)
- 02R / 02R96 (1995/2002)[81][82]
- 01V / 01V96 (1998/2003)
- ProMix01 (1994)[83]
- DMC1000 (1991)[# 10]
- DMP7/ DMP7-D (1987/1988)[# 10]
- DMP9-16 (1993)
- DMP11 (1988)
- DMR8 (1990)[# 10]
Analog mixing consoles
edit- IM8
- GA series
- GA24/12
- GA32/12
- PM series
- PM400 series
- PM1000 series
- PM1800A series
- PM2000 series
- PM3000 series
- PM3500 series
- PM4000 series
- PM5000 series
Analog audio mixers
edit- MG series (FX/C/CX/USB)
- MG82CX
- MG10/2 / MG102C
- MG12/4 / MG124C / MG124CX
- MG16/6FX / MG166C / MG166CX / MG166C-USB / MG166CX-USB
- MG206C / MG206C-USB
- MG24/14FX
- MG32/14FX
- GF series
- MC series
- MC-802
- MC-1202
- MC-1602
- MC-2403
- MC-3204
- MC-3204 II
- MR series
- MR-842
- MX series
Powered mixers
edit- EM series
- EM-80
- EM-90A
- EM-100II
- EM-120
- EM-150 / EM-150IIB
- EM-200 / EM-200B (8in/8mic/2aux/2out, 2×9band GEQ, output:2×200 W/ch)
- EM-300B
- EMX box type
- EMX212S / EMX312SC / EMX512SC (12in/6mic/2out, C = comp, 1×SPX, 2×7band GEQ, output:220/300/500 W/ch)
- EMX console type
- EMX5014C (14in/8mic/6comp/2out, 1×SPX, 2×9band GEQ, output:2×500 W@4Ω/ch)
- EMX5016CF (16in/12mic/8comp/2aux/2out, 2×SPX, 2×9band GEQ + FRC, output:2×500 W@4Ω/ch)
Outboards
edit- DME digital mixing engines
- DME24N / DME64N (digital mixing engine with network audio interface)
- REV digital reverberators
- REV1
- REV5
- REV7
- REV100
- REV500
- SREV1 (convolution reverberator)
- SPX digital multi effects
- SPX50D
- SPX90
- SPX900
- SPX990
- SPX1000
- SPX2000
- Analog outboards
- Q2031A (31band graphic equalizer)
Software effect processors
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2011) |
- Vintage Plug-in Collection
- based on Vintage Circuitry Modeling (VCM) technology
- Vintage Channel Strip (2011, EQ & compressors/limiter)
- Vintage Open Deck (2011, tape compression simulator)
- Vintage Stomp Pack (2011, effect stomps)
Studio monitors
edit- NS-10M / NS-10M Studio (passive)
- HS10W (sub-woofer)
- HS50M
- HS80M
- MSP3 / MSP3 Studio
- MSP5 / MSP5A / MSP5 Studio
- MSP7 Studio
- MSP10 / MSP10M / MSP10ST / MSP10 Studio
- SW10 / SW10 Studio (sub-woofer)
- HS5 / HS7 / HS8 / HS8s (sub-woofer)
- HS Series (HS3/HS4)
Microphones
edit- MZ101
Home audio
edit
|
- Hi-Fi audio components
-
- Hi-Fi audio amplifiers
- AX-500 Stereo amplifier
- AS-500 Stereo amplifier
- AX-550 Stereo amplifier
- AX-700 Stereo amplifier
- AX-900 Pre/main amplifier
- MX-35 2ch/4ch power amplifier
- M-4 2ch/4ch power amplifier
- Hi-Fi CD players
- CDX-560
- CDX-580
- Hi-Fi DVD players
- DVD-S30
- DVD-S80
- DVD-S510
- DVD-S520
- DVD-S530
- DVD-S540
- DVD-S550
- DVD-S557
- DVD-S559
- DVD-S657
- DVD-S659
- DVD-S661
- DVD-S663
- DVD-S700
- DVD-S705
- DVD-S795
- DVD-S796
- DVD-S830
- DVD-S840
- DVD-S1200
- DVD-S1500
- DVD-S1700
- DVD-S1800
- DVD-S2300
- DVD-S2500
- DVD-S2700
- Hi-Fi cassette decks
- KX-380
- KX-680
- Hi-Fi minidisc decks
- MDX-9
- MDX-595
- MDX-596
- MDX-793
- MDX-E300
- MDX-M5
- Hi-Fi turntables
- TT-200
- TT-300
- TT-300U
- TT-S303
- TT-400
- TT-400U
- TT-500
- TT-500U
- Hi-Fi tuners
- TX-930
- Hi-Fi receivers
- RX-10
- RX-330
- RX-350
- RX-360
- RX-385
- RX-395
- RX-396
- RX-397
- RX-450
- RX-460
- RX-485
- RX-495
- RX-496
- RX-500
- RX-530
- RX-550
- RX-570
- RX-595
- RX-700
- RX-730
- RX-750
- RX-770
- RX-777
- RX-797
- RX-830
- RX-900
- RX-930
- RX-A2A
- RX-A4A
- RX-A6A
- RX-A8A
- RX-A550
- RX-A660
- RX-A670
- RX-A680
- RX-A700
- RX-A710
- RX-A720
- RX-A730
- RX-A740
- RX-A750
- RX-A760
- RX-A770
- RX-A780
- RX-A800
- RX-A810
- RX-A820
- RX-A830
- RX-A840
- RX-A850
- RX-A860
- RX-A870
- RX-A1000
- RX-A1010
- RX-A1020
- RX-A1030
- RX-A1040
- RX-A1050
- RX-A1060
- RX-A1070
- RX-A2000
- RX-A2010
- RX-A2020
- RX-A2030
- RX-A2040
- RX-A2050
- RX-A2060
- RX-A2070
- RX-A2080
- RX-A3000
- RX-A3010
- RX-A3020
- RX-A3030
- RX-A3040
- RX-A3050
- RX-A3060
- RX-A3070
- RX-A3080
- RX-E100
- RX-E200
- RX-E410
- RX-E600
- RX-E810
- RX-S70
- RX-S600
- RX-S601
- CR-220
- CR-400
- CR-420
- CR-440
- CR-450
- CR-600
- CR-620
- CR-640
- CR-800
- CR-820
- CR-840
- CR-1000
- CR-1020
- CR-1040
- Hi-Fi equalizers
- GE-3
- GE-5
- GE-20
- GE-30
- GE-40
- GE-60
- EQ-32
- EQ-50
- EQ-70
- EQ-500
- EQ-550
- EQ-630
- GQ-1031
- GQ-2015
- GQ-2031
- Q-2031
- Hi-Fi VCD changers
- VCD-100K
- VCD-120K
- 28 Series
- A-28 amplifier
- K-28 cassette deck
- T-28 tuner
- P-28 turntable
- Sound processors
- DSP-1 Digital Soundfield Processor (1985)
- DSP-100 Digital Soundfield Processor
- DSP-E492 Natural Sound AV Processor Amplifier (1997–99)
- Natural Sound
- Hi-Fi audio speakers
-
- NS series
-
- NS-1
- NS-5X
- NS-10
- NS-044
- NS-200
- NS-333
- NS-344
- NS-500
- NS-A100
- NS-625
- NS-700x
- NS-1000
- NS-1000M
- NS-1000x
- NS-1000xw
- NS-2000
- NSX-10000
- Soavo series
- YSP series
- YSP-1
- YSP-800
- YSP-900
- YSP-1000
- YSP-1100
- YSP-1400
- YSP-1600
- YSP-2200
- YSP-2500
- YSP-2700
- YSP-3000
- YSP-3300
- YSP-4000
- YSP-4100
- YSP-4300
- YSP-5100
- YSP-5600
Electronics products
editHome computers
edit- YIS PU-I-20 / PU-I-10 (1981, CPU:YM6502+Z8000, Mem:128kB, Graphic:Vector graphics, 512x384@3bit, 12bit color pallet)[84][85]
- MSX/MSX2[86]
- AX-350 / AX-350II
- AX-500
- CX5 / CX5F / CX5M / CX5MII / CX5MII/128 — MSX computers
- CX7/128 / CX7M / CX7M/128 — MSX2 computers
- CX-11
- CX-100
- SX-100
- YIS-303
- YIS-503 / YIS-503II / YIS-503IIR / YIS-503II/64 / YIS-503IIIR / YIS-503IIIR/128 — MSX computers, base model of CX5M
- YIS-513
- YIS-603B
- YIS-604 / YIS-604/128
- YIS-805 / YIS-805/128 / YIS-805/256
Optical disc drives
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2011) |
Networking hardware
edit- Routers
- Switches
- Firewalls
- Software for Networking Products
Semiconductors
edit
Sound chips
edit- SCSP
- Yamaha Super Intelligent Sound Processor
- PSG/SSG
- OPL
- YM3526 (OPL)
- YM2413 (OPLL) — MSX-Music chip, adopted by MSX2+ (1988) & MSX TurboR (1990) standards.
- Y8950 — MSX-Audio chip, used on some MSX (1983) modules.
- YM3812 (OPL2) — used on 1st & 2nd generation Sound Blaster cards for FM sound.
- YMF262 (OPL3) — used on 3rd & 4th generation Sound Blaster cards for FM sound.
- YMF289 (OPL3-L) — low power variant of YMF262, used on some sound cards.
- YMF278 (OPL4) — used in MoonSound for MSX (1994)
- OPN
- YM2203 (OPN) — used on arcade systems.
- YM2608 (OPNA) — used on Nec PC-88/98 computer series.
- YM2610 (OPNB) — used on Neo Geo console.
- YM2612 (OPN2) — used in Sega's Mega Drive/Genesis game console and Fujitsu's FM Towns computer series.
- YM3438 (OPN2C) — used in Sega's System C-2, the coin-op version of the Mega Drive.
- YMF288 (OPN3-L)
- YMF297 (OPN4) — OPN3/OPL3
- OPS
- Misc
- YM2151 (OPM) — used on arcade systems and on SFG-01 FM Sound Synthesizer Unit for CX5M
- YM2164 (OPP) — used on DX21 / DX27 / DX100 / SFG-05 / FB-01, and Korg DS-8 / Korg 707
- YM3806 (OPQ)
- YM3420 (OPU)
- YMF271(OPX)
- YM2414 (OPZ) — used on DX11 / TX81Z, Korg Z3 guitar synthesizer
- YM2424 (OPZII) — used on V50, a pair of them for 16 note polyphony
- YM2154 (RYP4) — used on Porta Tone PSR-60, PSR-70 and PSR-80.
- YM3301 (RYP6)
- YM2142 (GE8)
- YM2163 (DSG)
- YMU757 (MA-1)
- YMU759 (MA-2)
- YMU762 (MA-3)
- YMU765 (MA-5)
- YMU786 (MA-7) — a mobile phone sound chip with 3D audio effect, etc.
- YMF293 — Formant Singing sound chip used for PLG100-SG.
- YMF7xx series (DS-1) — PC audio chip
- YMF70x~YMF719 — for ISA bus card
- YMF720~... — for PCI bus card
- YMF7x0 series — for on-board or embedded solutions
- YMF7x4 series — for PCI bus standalone adapter
- YMF724 — 2ch output
- YMF744 — 4ch output
- YMF754 — 5.1/6ch output
- YMP706 — Formant Shaping / FM Synthesis used for Yamaha FS1R and PLG100-DX.
- YMZ263 (MMA)
- YMZ280B (PCMD8)
- YMZ705 (SSGS)
- YMZ732 (SSGS2)
- YMZ733 (SSGS3)
- YMZ735 (FMS)
- YMZ771 (SSG3)
- YMZ774
- AudioEngine series
- YMW820 (NSX-1) (2013) — AudioEngine series sound chip integrating: General MIDI sound with Yamaha XG effects, and either Real Acoustic Sound (RAS) or eVocaloid.
- DAC
- YM3012 (DAC-MS) — used with YM2151 (OPM), etc..
- YM3014 (DAC-SS) — used with YM2203 (OPN), YM3812 (OPL2), etc..
- YM3016 (DAC-GD) — used with YM2608 (OPNA), YM2610 (OPNB), etc..
- YAC513 (DAC) — used with YMF278 (OPL4)
Video chips
edit- YM2217 — used in SG-1000 II
- YM2220 — used in some MSX machines.
- V9938 — MSX-Video chip, adopted by MSX2 (1985) standard.
- V9958 — MSX-Video chip, adopted by MSX2+ & MSX TurboR standards.
- V9990 — used in Graphics9000 extension for MSX (1994)
- YM2602 — used in Sega Master System (1985)
- YM7101 — used in Sega Genesis (1988)
- FH3006 — used in Sega Saturn (1994)
MSX peripheral chips
edit- MSX-Engine
- S1985 — MSX-SYSTEM II chip, for MSX2 System LSI.
- S3527 — MSX-SYSTEM chip, for MSX System LSI.
Sports equipment
editArchery
edit- YB
- YTS II
- YTD
- YTSL
- YTSL II
- YTD II
- EX
- Alpha DX
- Alpha SX
- Alpha EX
- Eolla
- Superfeel Forged 1
- Superfeel Forged 2
Snow ski
edit- 1970s All-Round
See also
editFootnotes
edit- notes
- ^ Electrostatic reed organ was developed by Frederick Albert Hoschke in 1934, then manufactured by Everett and Wurlitzer until 1961
- media
- ^ "YouTube - Yamaha SG Guitar History". YouTube. Archived from the original on 5 July 2015. (video)
- ^ "Yamaha SG-60T (1973)". The guitar collection. Archived from the original on 2 May 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2011. - featured in Guitarist (magazine), Sept. 2006.
- ^ Yamaha 2 speed Rotary Speaker unit (video). Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
- ^ Yamaha CSY-2 rotary speaker (1975) demonstration (video). Archived from the original on 15 April 2016.
- ^ Yamaha RA-50 "leslie speaker" from the 70s (video). Archived from the original on 21 September 2016.
- ^ Yamaha RA 100 (video). Archived from the original on 10 April 2016.
- ^ Yamha RA 200R (video). Archived from the original on 21 September 2016.
- ^ "Yamaha RA-200". Gilmourish.com. Archived from the original on 7 November 2011.
- ^ "Leslies, Doppolas and Rovers". Gilmourish.com. Archived from the original on 1 December 2011.
- ^ a b c d "My gear". Keep Sound Production. Archived from the original on 30 June 2010. (images)
References
edit- ^ a b c "G Series Grand Pianos (Current & Discontinued)". Yamaha Corporation of America. Archived from the original on 16 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- ^ "GB1K - 5' Classic Collection Grand Piano". Yamaha USA site. Archived from the original on 12 June 2012.
- ^ "Pianos - Yamaha Corporation". www.yamaha.com.
- ^ Colbeck, Julian (1996). Keyfax Omnibus Edition. MixBooks. p. 129. ISBN 0-918371-08-2.
- ^ "Yamaha DGX 530 review". Yamaha Keyboard Guide.
- ^ "Yamaha DGX 640 vs DGX 650 Specs Comparison | Piano Reviews". 29 April 2017.
- ^ "一時代を畫する新樂器完成 濱松の靑年技師山下氏" [An epoch new musical instrument was developed by a young engineer, Mr.Yamashita, in Hamamatsu]. Hochi Shimbun (in Japanese). 8 June 1935. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^
新電氣樂器 マグナオルガンの御紹介 [New Electric Musical Instrument – Introduction of Magna Organ] (in Japanese). Hamamatsu: 日本樂器製造株式會社 (Yamaha). October 1935.
特許第一〇八六六四号, 同 第一一〇〇六八号, 同 第一一一二一六号
- ^ a b
Junya, FUJINO (12 February 2020). "日本楽器製造の電気楽器「マグナオルガン」の理想と現実 ─楽音合成のメカニズム─]" [The Development of "Magna Organ" and Its Mechanism for Sound Synthesis: The Earliest Electric Musical Instrument of YAMAHA] (PDF). Geijutsu Bunka Kenkyū (in Japanese). 24. Osaka University of Arts Graduate School: 69–89. ISSN 1342-9086.
4.1 特許第 108664 号(1934 年 3 月 15 日出願 ... 当該明細書には「特許請求の範囲」として次の三点が列記されている。/ 1. 「適当なる機械的振動体例えば発音「リード」と「マイクロフォン」とを原音の演奏室への漏洩を阻止すべく構成せる音響的絶縁密閉室内に配置」 / 2. 「『ペダル』又は鍵盤に加うる圧力に依る音量制御及び前期『リード』群の制御を全て演奏室に設置せる『コンソール』により行う」 / 3. 「『マイクロフォン』電流の増幅回路の一部に適当の周波数変換機を接続して原動電流及之と適当倍率関係に変換せる振動電流に依る楽音を前記密閉室外に於て同時に発音」
See also bellow patents: JP108664C, JP110068C, and JP111216C. - ^ JP 108664C, 山下 靜一 [Yamashita, Seiichi], "電氣樂器 [Electric instrument]", published 1934-08-01, issued 1934-11-28, assigned to 日本樂器製造株式會社 [Yamaha]
- ^ a b
Junya, FUJINO. "マグナオルガン(1934)" [Magna Organ (1934)]. telmusica.com (in Japanese).
機構1 特許第 108664 号(1934 年 3 月 15 日出願): リードの振動をマイクロフォンにより集音し、その信号を周波数逓倍器に入力することで、5倍音と7倍音を除く、9倍音までの部分音(倍音)を生成する。 / 機構2 特許第 110068 号(1934 年 5 月 9 日出願): 逓倍回路は用いず、1. 音色が異なる複数の発音体 2. 特性が異なる複数のマイクロフォン、 3. 特性が異なる複数 のスピーカ を「所定の楽器の音響的特性に近似なる如く」(特許第 110068 号明細書) 組み合わせることで種々の音色を 生成する。
- ^ JP 110068C, 山下 靜一 [Yamashita, Seiichi], "電氣樂器 [Electric instrument]", published 1934-11-19, issued 1935-03-26, assigned to 日本樂器製造株式會社 [Yamaha]
- ^ JP 111216C, 山下 靜一 [Yamashita, Seiichi], "電氣樂器 [Electric instrument]", published 1935-03-11, issued 1935-06-19, assigned to 日本樂器製造株式會社 [Yamaha]
- ^
"クロダトーン アーカイブス" [CRODATONE archives]. CrodaOrgan.net (in Japanese).
クロダトーンの第一号は昭和34年3月(1959年)、日本基督教団 西千葉教会に納品されました。/ 当時の写真と録音が残っています。[1st CRODATONE (1959)] / 初期のクロダトーンは音源がハーモニカ、アコーディオン、リードオルガン等に使われているものと同じ原理のフリーリードで、本体内に送風機とリードが組み込まれていて常時全てのリードを振動させてその振動から電気信号を取り出していました。そして鍵盤のスイッチで必要な音をon,offする仕組みでした。/ 常に全てのリードが鳴っていますからしっかりと防音しなければならず二重の箱で覆われています。
See also: 1st CRODATONE (1959) photo, sound 1, sound 2 - ^ "History of Products - Yamaha Electronic Musical Instruments". Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 15 December 2009. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ "History of Electone - Electone 50th Anniversary in 2009" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. 2009. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011.
- ^ 道志郎 [Shiro Michi] (1958). クリスマスメロディーズ・イン・ヤマハエレクトーン [Christmas Melodies in Yamaha Electone] (Vinyl record, LP, Single, Stereo) (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Nippon Grammophon. YE-2 / JP-107.
Christmas Melodies in Yamaha Electone / The first Electone prototype concept, named Type E-T, developed by Yamaha (Nippon Gakki) in the year 1958. / ...
- ^ エレクトーン誕生ストーリー [The story of Electone] (in Japanese). Japan.
Brief history of Yamaha Electone
- ^ 沖 浩一 [Koichi Oki], 酒井 潮 [Ushio Sakai], 斎藤 英美 [Hidemi Saito], 関藤 繁生 [Shigeo Sekito] (1968). エレクトーン・ファンタスティック!! EX-21のすべて [Electone Fantastic [All about EX-21]] (Vinyl record, LP) (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: CBS/Sony. SOND66006. (Note: several tracks are available on YouTube; B6:L'amour Est Bleu (played by Koichi Oki), A7:Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (played by Hidemi Saito), B7:The Last Waltz (played by Hidemi Saito))
- ^ a b Mark Jenkins, Analog Synthesizers, page 76 Archived 26 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Taylor & Francis
- ^ "Yamaha GX-1 - Vintage Synth Explorer". www.vintagesynth.com. Archived from the original on 3 November 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
- ^
"History of Electone - 1970s" (in Japanese). on "Yamaha Electone Station > About Electone > History of Electone". Yamaha Corporation.
"1977 EX-1 (1977-1983) 153.4cm(W)×80cm(D)×114cm(H) 220kg / 1977EX-2 (1977-1983) 152cm(W)×80cm(D)×106.1cm(H) 194kg" - ^ 一時代を画する新楽器完成 浜松の青年技師山下氏 [An epoch new musical instrument was developed by a young engineer Mr.Yamashita in Hamamatsu]. Hochi Shimbun (in Japanese). 8 June 1935. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012.
- ^
新電氣樂器 マグナオルガンの御紹介 [New Electric Musical Instrument — Introduction of Magna Organ] (in Japanese). Hamamatsu: 日本樂器製造株式會社 (Yamaha). October 1935. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013.
特許第一〇八六六四号, 同 第一一〇〇六八号, 同 第一一一二一六号
- ^ "Yamaha CS80". Sound On Sound. July 1995. Archived from the original on 8 April 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha VL7". Sound On Sound. March 1995. Archived from the original on 8 June 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha W7". Sound On Sound. January 1995. Archived from the original on 15 September 2014.
- ^ "Yamaha Motif". Sound On Sound. April 2001. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ a b c d "Yamaha Keyboards - New products archives over 20 years". Y.M.M. Player (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Player Corporation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
- ^ "Yamaha QY70". Sound On Sound. September 1997. Archived from the original on 9 April 2015.
- ^ "Small is Beautiful". Sound On Sound. October 2001. Archived from the original on 8 June 2015.
- ^ "Toy Story?". Sound On Sound. June 2001. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ "Classic FM?". Sound On Sound. July 2001. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ "The Means of Production". Sound On Sound. October 2001. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha RY10". Music Technology. August 1992. p. 72. ISSN 0957-6606. OCLC 24835173.
- ^ "Chronology - Yamaha - United States". usa.yamaha.com. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
- ^ "Yamaha DD5". Music Technology. Vol. 3, no. 8. July 1989. p. 68. ISSN 0957-6606. OCLC 24835173.
- ^ "Yamaha TG100". The Ultimate Amiga Buyer's Guide '94. No. 1. Winter 1994. p. 173.
- ^ "Yamaha TG300". Sound On Sound. March 1994. Archived from the original on 7 June 2015.
- ^ "Plug-in Boards (archive products)". Yamaha Corporation of America. Archived from the original on 1 March 2011.
- ^ "PLG100-SG Formant Synging Plug-in Board" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "TableHooters - my instrument hacks and collection". warranty void. Archived from the original on 25 December 2010. (circuit bending informations)
- ^ "WX7 - Yamaha Design - Yamaha Corporation". www.yamaha.com. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
- ^ "The Yamaha WX11 & the VL70m Sound Module". My Breath My Music. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
- ^ Wilkinson, Scott. "Yamaha WX5". EMusician. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
- ^ "r/windsynth - i am late with this but yamaha wx5 is discontinued". reddit. 9 November 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
- ^ "MEP4 MIDI Event Processor Owner's Manual". Yamaha Corporation. [VD68670] 88 04 0 1 R2. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015.
- ^ 8-Bit Keys (15 May 2016). "Ultima VI Introduction Music performed on vintage Yamaha PS-55". Archived from the original on 10 August 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2018 – via YouTube.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Oh No! More Square Waves! Yamaha PSS 125". 8 bit keys. Archived from the original on 3 February 2017.
- ^ "Yamaha PSS-270 Retro-Keyboard Full Review". 8 bit keys (youtube). Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
- ^ Berndt, Hugo. "Wer Wirbt Wie / Wie Klingt Was - Archiv der Anzeigen und Werbesprüche der "Elektronischen Musikinstrumente" - Hard- und Software". Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- ^ a b "Undocumented Sound Chips 2154". Archived from the original on 11 May 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
- ^ "EEVblog #256 – Yamaha PSR-80 Keyboard Teardown". EEVBlog. Archived from the original on 2 March 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Yamaha Guitars & Amplifiers catalog 1968". Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 8 December 2010.
- ^ I own one (770317) but can find no information about it
- ^ JP application 187409, "ギター構造の特許 (Patent of guitar structure)", published January 1951
- ^ JP patent application publication 1951-190 (特許出願公告 昭26-190 Archived 20 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine), 伊藤翁介 (Osuke Ito) [in Japanese]. ギターの表面振動板 [Soundboard of Guitar] (PDF). Japan Patent Office 特許公報. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015. (公告:昭25.1.25 / 出願:昭24.12.10 / 特願:昭24-13107)
- ^
"Yamaha Dynamic Guitar Web Museum" (photo gallery) (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 23 July 2015.
See also: serial number list Archived 23 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine & chart Archived 23 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine. - ^
Kintoki. ダイナミックブレーシング [Dynamic Bracing]. Let's play the guitar! ギターをひこう (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 3 July 2015.
ダイナミックブレーシングとはヤマハ ダイナミックギターに採用された 伊藤翁介氏が考案した ギター構造の特許 です 伊藤翁介ダイナミックギタートリオの演奏 / NO.40の ブレーシング です このラインはトップ、バックともに裏側が薄く塗装してあります / 高音弦側の一つは切り欠きが施してあります
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See also: JA patent application publication 1951-190, Dynamic Bracing on Yamaha Dynamic Guitar No.40 Archived 24 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine (jpg), and Performance by inventor Archived 24 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine (mp3). - ^ "Yamaha/Dynamic Guitar No. 4/Acoustic Guitar/1960s" (in Japanese). Kitakata, Fukushima: Easy Guitars (used guitar shop). Archived from the original on 24 July 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha Dynamic Guitar S-20 - equalization of the fret heights, and the replacement of an octave tuning bridge" (in Japanese). Kichijōji, Tokyo: Neiro Design (repair shop). Archived from the original on 24 July 2015.
- ^ "SJ180 (1981-1985)", GuitArchive, Yamaha Corporation of America
- ^ a b c "YAMAHA Guitas & Basses - New products archives over last 20 years". Y.M.M. Player (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Player Corporation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Michael Wright. "Yamaha SG - The Classic". Vintage Guitar Magazine (June 2003). Archived from the original on 18 October 2011. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ a b "Yamaha SG Series". Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 22 December 2010. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
- ^ "Discontinued Guitar Model DB" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 4 April 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "BB Series - Electric bass guitars". jp.yamaha.com (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 28 June 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "BB Series - Basses". usa.yamaha.com. Yamaha Corporation of America. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
- ^ a b "a little, tried effect pedals". Ushigome Pan (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. (see also a more little tried ... Archived 18 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine)
- ^ a b c d "owned effect pedals". Ushigome Pan (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 18 April 2015.
- ^ a b Yamaha Guitars and Basses New Line Up catalog 1990, 5 April 2019, archived from the original on 13 December 2021, retrieved 6 May 2020
- ^ a b c d e f Yamaha Guitars and Basses catalog 1992, 5 April 2019[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c Yamaha Guitars and Basses catalog 1994
- ^ a b Yamaha Guitar Amplifiers & P.A Systems catalog 1980
- ^ Yamaha Guitar Amplifiers & P.A Systems catalog 1977
- ^ a b c d e f "Yamaha TA-20, TA-30, TA-60, TA-90, RA-50, R-60". OzValveAmps.com. Archived from the original on 7 December 2011. — including a catalog page of TA series Archived 26 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "YAMAHA Drums - New products archives over 20 years". Y.M.M. Player (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Player Corporation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
- ^ Vander Stoep, Evan. "Yamaha Music Sirens". The Siren Board. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
- ^ "YAMAHA others - New products archives over 20 years". Y.M.M. Player (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Player Corporation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
- ^ "2012 - News Release - News & Events - Yamaha". www.yamahaproaudio.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
- ^ "Yamaha 02R". Sound On Sound. August 1995. Archived from the original on 7 June 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha 02R". Sound On Sound. February 1996. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha Promix 01". Sound On Sound. January 1995. Archived from the original on 6 June 2015.
- ^ "Live a joyful life with YIS". ASCII (in Japanese) (June 1982). ASCII Corporation. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ "Cool machines - Yamaha YIS PU-I-20" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 25 September 2013. — a home automation system in 1982. Also system integration diagram is at the bottom of page.
- ^ "Yamaha CX5M" (in Spanish). El Museo de los 8 bits. Archived from the original on 22 August 2011.
Bibliography
edit- current models
- "Products". Yamaha Corporation of America.
- "Yamaha Commercial Audio Systems & NEXO".
- historical models
- "History of the Yamaha Group" (PDF). IR publications. Yamaha Corporation. 2010.
- "Development of Yamaha Products", Corporate Information (chronology), Yamaha Corporation, retrieved 6 March 2016
- "Grand piano products chronology" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 September 2017.
- "Upright piano products chronology" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 6 July 2017.
- "History of Electone - Electone 50th Anniversary in 2009" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. 2009. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ピアノ/キーボード:製品アーカイブ検索 [Piano/Keyboard: archived products (searched result)] (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
- "History of Products - Yamaha Electronic Musical Instruments". Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 15 December 2009. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- "History of Products - Yamaha Professional Audio". Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 15 May 2011. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- "GuitArchive". Yamaha Corporation of America.
- "Discontinued Guitar Model DB" (in Japanese). Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 4 April 2011.
- acoustic guitar catalogs
- "Yamaha Guitars & Amplifiers catalog 1968". 8 January 2011.
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1969 (Red label 1)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1969 (Red label 2)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1972 (Green label 1)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1972 (Green label 2)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1974 (Black label)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1974 (L-31/FG-1200S/FG-1200SN)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1976" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1978" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1978 (Custom/Order made)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1980" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1980 (Electric Folk)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1981" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1981 (FG series)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1981 (Electric Folk)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1982 (XS Limited)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Folk Guitar catalog 1984" (in Japanese).
- electric guitar catalogs
- "Yamaha Guitar catalogs (1966–2004)". archived by VintAxe.com Vintage Guitars (password required)
- "Yamaha Guitars & Amplifiers catalog 1968". 8 January 2011.
- "Yamaha Electric Guitar catalog 1980" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Electric Guitar catalog 1981" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Electric Guitar catalog 1982" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Electric Guitar catalog 1985" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha New Commer catalog 1985 Winter (guitar pages)" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Effects catalog 1980" (in Japanese).
- keyboard catalogs
- "Yamaha Keyboard catalog 1978" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Keyboard catalog 1979" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Keyboard catalog 1980" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha Keyboard catalog 1985" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha DX100/DX27 catalog 1985" (in Japanese).
- "Yamaha New Commer catalog 1985 Winter (keyboard pages)" (in Japanese).
Further reading
edit- "Yamaha QY8". Future Music. No. 22. Future Publishing. August 1994. p. 25. ISSN 0967-0378. OCLC 1032779031.
- "Yamaha QY300". Future Music. No. 22. Future Publishing. August 1994. p. 37. ISSN 0967-0378. OCLC 1032779031.
External links
edit- "Yamaha PSS list". nurykabe.com. Archived from the original on 19 June 2015.
- ^ "Yamaha P115 Retro-Keyboard Full Review". Archived from the original on 31 August 2017.