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Korg, 61-Key Midi Controller, 61 Key (MKEYAIR61)

  • Based on 990 reviews
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Availability: Only 4 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Friday, Jun 7
Order within 13 hours and 56 minutes
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Style: microKEY air 61


Features

  • Connect wirelessly to iPad, iPhone, or Mac
  • Lasts a month between battery changes
  • Usb compatible
  • Compact and playable natural touch Mini keyboard
  • Lavish array of powerful music software bundled free of charge

Description

Too Many wires in your studio? Are they literally holding you back from the freedom of different configurations and setups? Korg, creators of the best- selling micro key Series and the next-gen Microkey2 series can help you break free with the new micro key air Series of wireless MIDI controllers!.


Item Weight: 3.76 pounds


Product Dimensions: 37.2 x 7.28 x 3.22 inches


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: MKEYAIR61


Batteries: 2 AA batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: February 1, 2016


Color Name: Black


Connector Type: USB


Hardware Interface: USB 2.0


Number of Keyboard Keys: 61


Size: 61 Key


Battery type: Alkaline


Power Source: Battery Powered


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, Jun 7

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Good Keyboard, No Windows Bluetooth
Style: microKEY air 37
The keyboard itself is great. The keys are smartly compressed to fit 3 octaves (37), and the touch is smooth and precise in registering velocity values. They are not weighted, which is preferable when programming midi (unlike when playing classical piano) - some confuse this for being cheap feeling, but its actually pretty good for non-weighted keys. The Big Problem is that the bluetooth driver is not compatible with current Windows 10/11 updates (instant disconnect, and a range of only a few inches on my two Windows PCs, while other bluetooth devices work fine). I tested on two different MicroKey Air 37s to confirm this. Windows does not include native midi-over-bluetooth support, and it is up to manufacturers to support it via custom drivers. Korg has not bothered to fix drivers when OS updates break them. On the MicroKey Air page, Korg states that the bluetooth driver is compatible with Windows 8.1 and above, but this is simply not the case (and is also problematic with Apple updates, as I have read). I would suggest getting the MicroKey2 instead of the Air - it's the exact same keyboard, but without bluetooth, and a lot cheaper. The reality is that midi bluetooth simply does not work reliably on any OS (for very long), and Korg does not seem to show the dedication required to maintain bluetooth driver compatibility in a timely fashion. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 7, 2022 by A. Mccormack A. Mccormack

  • Great so far
Style: microKEY air 37
Works great so far
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 28, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • Windows drivers are fundamentally broken
Style: microKEY air 25
As BT keyboard for the phone - no problem, works really well and fun. The keys are adequate for the size. As the USB keyboard it is practically useless. The drivers are reset every few hours or when the KB is disconnected and re-connected. When I want to use it on Windows PC I need to run a Registry patch every time to let the drivers install and then install the drivers again. Velocity sensitivity profiles differ so slightly that there is no point in changing. No aftertouch. The joystik mapping is non-standard, it cannot be custom-mapped on X-axis and only half of Y-axis (upper or lower) can be mapped and used. Arpegiator does not sync with the external clock, thus useless. Overall: good toy to fiddle on the phone, nothing more. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 2, 2022 by Vladimir Belomestnov

  • I guess, if you think you have to have Bluetooth - great option.
Style: microKEY air 37
The keyboard functions well and is nice to play. I dont know what some people are talking about with them seeming to not like the keys or saying its cheap. Its a good build overall and it connects quickly and seamlessly to my iPad Pro (USB-C or Bluetooth both work great!) For USB-C make sure you buy apple brand camera connection kit and you will be good to go. I purchased this after goofing around with a $60 midi keyboard from a competitor. Getting the ipad pro to recognize it was a complete nightmare (even though many reviews say it works great - definitely not my experience with that one). After many failed attempts to get it to connect more often than 1 out of 30 tries and several dangles, and hubs and adapters later, i decided I had to get something with Bluetooth. My only beef with this product is really just a beef with the industry in general. Its frankly astonishing to me that we are in the year 2020 and getting Bluetooth on a midi keyboard is some super premium feature that jacks the price up considerably. A person is essentially forced to choose between features or Bluetooth. The midi controllers that are available at this same price point with no bluetooth - all kinds of features! You're getting more pads and knobs and lights and bells and features than you know what to do with. But... if you want Bluetooth wah-wah. You get a basic keyboard. This would be understandable in 2012. It makes no sense in 2020. I cant really fault korg for this. They make the lower priced of the major brands in the market. Just shocking that competition in bluetooth hasnt made this a non issue. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 20, 2020 by Amazon Customer

  • Bluetooth MIDI keyboards can't auto-reconnect without a CME WIDI Bud
Style: microKEY air 25
This thing doesn't reconnect on its own over Bluetooth. Regardless of whether I was on a Mac or PC, I still had to manually reconnect the keyboard in my settings every time I used it. This is pretty bad and almost made me give up on using this thing completely. However, I found a solution that makes the keyboard work reliably and avoids the need to install the terrible drivers: the CME WIDI Bud. https://www.amazon.com/CME-WIDI-Bud-Bluetooth-Wireless/dp/B01N7I2TUS With this adapter the microKEY Air now reconnects to my computer every time I turn it on. I don't need to think about reconnecting it -- I just turn on the keyboard and start playing, as it should be. I'm disappointed that a $60 adapter is needed to make a $135 device usable, but it seems that the inability to auto-reconnect is a common limitation of all Bluetooth MIDI keyboards. The microKEY Air 25 is a good keyboard but I wasn't aware of this hidden cost when I originally bought it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 14, 2021 by Radford Smith

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