Casio CTK-7000 Portable Electronic Keyboard (61-Key)

The 61-key Casio CTK-700 features 800 tones, 250 preset rhythms, audio recording capabilities and all the necessary tools for a musician of any level.

Overall User Ratings (based on 8 ratings)
  • Overall:
    3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Sound:
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Features:
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Ease of Use:
    2.5 out of 5 stars
  • Quality:
    3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Value:
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Manufacturer Support:
    3.5 out of 5 stars
  • The Wow Factor:
    3 out of 5 stars
Overall: 3.5 out of 5 stars
(8) (see rating details)
Submitted December 23, 2014 by Gary D in Port Charlotte, FL

"It might not be exactly like a B3. But it's also not 450 pounds."

Overall: 5 out of 5 stars
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Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
As with every zZounds order, this one arrived as promised, when promised. The Casio CTK-7000 was sold and discounted as a "blemish." One I've yet to find. It was part of my plan to retire 450 pounds of B3-type musical living room furniture and its 150 pound wooden traveling companion. My chiropractor is still in mourning. I knew Casio had come a long way in recent years. I also knew that even with the improved CTK-7000 series, they weren't entirely there yet when it came to running with the big ticket clonewheels. But once I fought my way through the manual and had it making sound, it was clear that whatever differences a trained ear might detect weren't worth the substantial difference in price. And with a few easy fixes, not even the purest of the purists had a clue. Unless you're doing arena tours, the average "recreational" keyboardist can play the CTKs where is and as is. Want that B3 sound? It's there. Have fun. The touch is fine, and the keys are pretty much where you expect them to be. And the onboard speakers are more than enough to get the job done. After 15 minutes or so, it all falls into place. If anything, this keyboard does too much. An insane amount of too much. So much, that it was a tossup between reading the Old Testament-length manual or waiting for the movie version to be released. I've only waved to the chapter on MIDI while passing through to the stuff at the back of the book. I figure my 25-key controller can handle it until I can devote a week or so to all things MIDI. Along with the recording stuff. My lone gripe centers on the way the drawbars were designed. And I was aware of the problem prior to punching in my card number. They are incremental. Unlike the smooth flow found on the originals, when you extend the 7000's drawbars they do a step-by-step transition from one tone to the next. I understand this has been fixed with later models. Whenever I find this annoying, all it takes is a glance at the receipt I taped to the keyboard. The one with the price circled in red. Usually makes it all better. The CTK is fine for the kind of gigs we're now doing. The kind where payment tends to come in the form of an open bar tab rather than a check with commas. The kind where the bar manager can barely spell "B3" let alone notice you're longer playing one. Don't worry about the patrons. They aren't there for the organ music. Give the 7000 or one of its Casio kin a powered sub-woofer, a decent amp (crank down the treble and mids), a decent rotary emulator or, like me, go out and curbside yourself an unwanted spinet with a built in Leslie. Bring chainsaw. Then dare the Organ Guild to find the difference.
Sound
As mentioned in the review, split the signal out into a powered sub and a decent guitar amp. The sub adds punch to the bottom end and the mids. The built in Leslie effect is okay, but consider investing in a rotary stomp box or the real deal if you want the best sound.
Features
About half the settings will never leave the house. Most of the piano and organ presets are fine. And with the drawbars, the variety of tones is almost endless.
Ease of Use
To squeeze out the Casio's full potential means spending a ton of time with the manual. Ignoring most of the stuff this keyboard can do, I had it playing in a matter of minutes.
Quality
It's plastic. What isn't?
Value
Absolutely. If you're downsizing from a B3, the chiropractic savings will pay for the thing in a few months.
Manufacturer Support
n/a
The Wow Factor
Casio and "WOW" are seldom found in the same sentence. But there was no shortage of "WOW" once I had it up and running for its first sound check. Then came the "WOW." It's a Casio dressed in midnight black that doesn't look or sound anything like the toys Casio once produced. And there are no lighted keys. Not that I can find, that is.

Musical Background:

LBJ was president when I joined my first junior high band. A former touring musician who dropped out to get a degree and a job.

Musical Style:

Keyboard style has been described as old school funk. The kind that's the result of not being able to read a lick of music.
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Submitted July 21, 2011 by a customer from aol.com

"NOT IMPRESSED"

Overall: 1.5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
Spend the extra couple hundred for the Yamaha MM6. It does a lot of the same things, has a lot of the same sounds, but all the sounds are GREAT & VERY usable with a band. I wouldn't replace this piece & would sell or trade it in a second.
Sound
The way they advertize the 'drawbar organ'.......a B3 clone it's not. Tinny harsh organ sounds, not able to escape that 'ice skating rink' feel. Pianos, acoustic & electric OK, but nothing special. Play it with my band through a Roland KC500, but I'm leaving this home & using my Yamaha MM6.
Features
AC adaptor & music stand. Lot of different rhythm patterns with bass & chord backgrounds. Plastic, but not as light to carry as it should be.
Ease of Use
Unable to get usable quality sounds for professional situations. It'll sound fine in your living room. Manual fine, explains everything, but if you tweak a poor sound it doesn't make it a good sound.

Musical Background:

ACTIVE MUSICIAN

Musical Style:

Rock/Blues
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Submitted February 2, 2015 by Maximo Rodriguez in Lynn, MA

"casio should realy look in to making modules of their best instruments"

Overall: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
The ctk7000 I recently purchased is a very good product with only one drawback, the 61 key soft touch/ touch sensitive keyboard is not one of my favorites, I mean the sounds are of great quality the control surface and rhythm patterns are most useful, a 16 track sequencer very good; but I really would have liked amore sturdy keyboard to control it all since the 61 touch sensitive keys are a little slippery and toy like, if CASIO made modules of their instruments we would have the choice of adding a more sturdy midi controller with weighted hammer action keys maybe...

Musical Background:

I been learning to play the keyboard for a while now, ( learning is never ending)

Musical Style:

rock, jazz, electronica, ambient, chill etc...
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