Kurzweil Home and Mobile Digital Pianos

Widely recognized as the first computerized instrument to faithfully capture the grand piano, Kurzweil has been at the forefront of making the highest quality instruments for the home and the stage since 1982.

Artesia Pro is thrilled to announce the addition of Kurzweil pianos to its distinguished lineup of musical instruments. Known for their exceptional quality and innovative design, Kurzweil pianos bring a fresh wave of home and portable pianos to our customers. This exciting collaboration promises to elevate the musical experience for both aspiring musicians and seasoned professionals. Learn more about the range of new models that blend cutting-edge technology with timeless craftsmanship.

Home Digital Pianos

Kurzweil’s line of home digital pianos delivers an authentic playing experience perfect for both beginners and seasoned players.

PRO KEYBOARDS

Kurzweil’s Pro Keyboards combine advanced technology with professional-grade performance and are ideal for live performers, composers, and sound designers.
mobile digital pianos

MOBILE DIGITAL PIANOS

Kurzweil’s Mobile Digital Pianos blend cutting-edge technology with sleek design, offering a range of keyboards that cater to diverse musical needs.

Artesia Pro is thrilled to announce the addition of Kurzweil pianos to its distinguished lineup of musical instruments. Known for their exceptional quality and innovative design, Kurzweil pianos bring a fresh wave of home and portable pianos to our customers. This exciting collaboration promises to elevate the musical experience for both aspiring musicians and seasoned professionals. Learn more about the range of new models that blend cutting-edge technology with timeless craftsmanship.

About Kurzweil

“Stevie Wonder was our first customer for the Kurzweil Reading Machine (the first print-to-speech reading machine) in 1976. We became friends and had many conversations about technology as applied to both disabilities and music.

In 1982, while giving me a tour of his new “Wonderland” music studio, Stevie asked if it would be possible to build a bridge between the powerful control methods of computer music (in which a broad variety of input devices could be used to control any available sound) with the beautiful sounds of acoustic instruments such as the piano and guitar.

I thought about it, and concluded that it would be feasible. Kurzweil Music Systems was born in 1982 with Stevie Wonder as musical advisor.

We showed a prototype of the Kurzweil 250 at the June 1983 NAMM show and people were amazed that both the look and feel of a grand piano was realistically captured in an electronic instrument for the first time. We started shipping the product in 1984 and it quickly became recognized as the first computerized instrument to faithfully capture the grand piano, which we confirmed in A-B tests with pianists.

Over the next quarter century we developed a succession of digital keyboards that maintained this leadership in realism while also providing a broad new palette of sounds and sound modification techniques that are only possible in the electronic world.

This was the vision that Stevie Wonder had articulated in 1982 and I was personally gratified that he felt satisfied that we had achieved it. Many other high profile artists (Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, The Who, Earth, Wind and Fire, the Boston Pops, Andrew Lloyd Webber to name a few) around the world seemed to agree.

I have always felt that the type of technology that Kurzweil Music represents is highly democratizing. Years ago only the top studios and academic laboratories could afford technology that allowed flexible shaping of new sounds. Now these tools can be afforded by everyone from music students to weekend musicians. As technological advances continue to ramp up at an exponential pace, KMS will continue to push the boundaries of what is possible, further blurring the line between music and machine.”

- Ray Kurzweil