🎶 Elevate Your Sound Game with the MPK Mini Play MK3!
The Akai Professional MPK Mini Play MK3 is a compact MIDI keyboard controller featuring a 25-key dynamic keybed, built-in speaker, and over 100 internal sounds. It offers seamless integration with Native Instruments software, making it perfect for beat makers and musicians on the go. With educational software included and the ability to power via batteries or USB, this versatile controller is designed for creativity and convenience.
Product Dimensions | 18.03 x 31.75 x 4.83 cm; 816.47 g |
Item model number | MPKMINIPLAYMK3 |
Colour | black |
Compatible Devices | Laptop |
Connector | USB |
Hardware Interface | USB |
Supported Software | MPC Beats, MPC expansion packs plus software instruments Hype, Stage Piano and Electric from AIR Music Tech |
Material Type | Plastic |
Musical Style | Electronic |
Instrument Key | Any |
Number of Keyboard Keys | 25 |
Mixer Channel Quantity | 1 |
Hardware Platform | x86-64 |
Standing screen display size | 1 Inches |
Item Weight | 816 g |
P**K
Compact and handy
Bought this to make music production more accessible for my kid. They can just pick it up using the on board battery power (3xAA) and on board weak, but okay speaker, which is great if you're on your own and there's no noise around (plus with a kid using it without headphones having it not too loud is a good thing).Pads are great quality and responsive. Keys are okay for the price of what this is. In built sounds aren't mind blowing and I'm sure I heard a lot of them 25 years or so, but are fine for what this is.Connected to the pc, this is pretty awesome and easy to move and store.Best keyboard ever? No.Best portable, built in sound, battery operated keyboard with lots of cool little functions? I'd say yes for the money.
S**
A little gem. Perfect.
I Love this, perfect for practicing my scales when chilling out. Great as stand alone with own sounds or as a midi keyboard. Perfect for a small lo-fi bedroom set up. You can make some great music with this and an iPad or laptop in a tiny space.Practice is a bugbear going to the piano but with this it’s easy to do 20 minutes a day and get better. Having its own sounds running on batteries (battery life is outstanding) is ideal.
B**I
Great piece of kit but could do with some improvements
I've only had this for a couple days but so far this has been a great piece of kit for me as a beginner, it's got all you need on it for so cheap. my only gripe with it is that there is no sequencer. therefore you cannot latch the drums while you're playing the keys, which is quite disappointing
P**E
Love it!
First of all, the disclaimer. I'm not a musician. I've never played a keyboard before in my life, nor have I ever produced music on a computer. I own a ukulele, which I play really badly, and that's about it.What did I want? I fancied having a mess with a keyboard, but I wanted something small, ideally small enough to stick in my suitcase when I go travelling away with work, so not something bulky or heavy, and ideally that could run off batteries. I also wanted something that could make sounds on its own, had a speaker so I could hear what I was doing, and could also have headphones connected so I wouldn't upset my wife too much. I liked the idea of something that I could connect to my PC or laptop so I could do some fancier stuff if the mood took me. Above all else, because this would most likely be a bit of a fad for me, I didn't want to spend an absolute fortune.It's safe to say that for me, the Akai MPK Mini Play ticks all of the boxes. The first thing you notice is that it is tiny! Powered by 3 AA batteries or by USB (more on that later) it's a dinky little thing, with 25 keys, eight drum pads, six knobs you can twiddle to mess with the sound, and 128 different keyboard sounds and ten drum kits to play with. As soon as I put the batteries in, the first thing I did was to press a key to hear what it sounded like, then turn the knob at the top to change instruments and press the same key again to hear how it now sounded, which of course I repeated 128 times much to the frustration of my wife (thank heaven for headphones!) The keyboard has a tiny built-in speaker but even on full volume, it's quiet - don't expect it to fill a room, but it's fine for sitting by yourself, tinkering away. Of course, if you connect the keyboard to a speaker with its own volume control you could make things rather louder.On the left of the keyboard you'll find various other controls. The red joystick allows you to bend the pitch of a note, and below this the arpeggiator will play a note multiple times when pressed - you can configure the repeat interval by selecting a setting using the keys (explained in the rather skimpy manual.) There are buttons to move up or down through the octaves too. As a full sized keyboard has more than 25 keys on it, the MPK Mini Play starts out as being somewhere in the middle of a full keyboard's range, so if you press the "octave down" button you'll effectively shift to the left a bit, and "octave up" shifts you to the right. The drum pads are pressure sensitive, so the harder you tap them the louder the drum sounds, but if you press the "full level" button they sound at maximum volume no matter how hard you hit them. All in all, just with this basic functionality, it's loads of fun, and for an absolute beginner like me it's a joyous little thing to play with.Inside the box, there's a USB cable. On the back of the keyboard you'll find a headphone socket (standard 3.5mm connector, as used on mobile phones etc.), a port for connecting a sustain / loop pedal, a USB port, and a switch labelled "USB / BATT". If the switch is in the "BATT" position, the keyboard is essentially "on" and running off battery power, so it will produce sounds using its own internal workings. If however you flick the switch to "USB" it is basically "off" and won't do anything until you connect the USB lead and plug it into a computer. Please note, the keyboard can't run off something like a USB phone charger. As soon as you plug the keyboard into a computer is is effectively "dumb", and acts as a controller for music production software. Of course, if you don't have any such software, you won't be able to use it with your computer. Thankfully, Akai have included a card inside the box with a link to register your keyboard, and then you can download some free software. The software you can get includes ProTools|First, SONiVOX Wobble, Air Hybrid, Reason Lite, and Akai's own MPC Essentials. Personally I found that MPC Essentials doesn't seem to work with the MPK Mini Play, and some of the other packages needed a PC which was at least an i5 processor to work (eg ProTools|First) so my computer wouldn't work with it, and others were for eg dubstep music production, which isn't my cup of tea, but I quite like messing with Reason Lite. Mac options are available for all of the downloadable packages, and you can also use it with Garageband apparently.All in all, I absolutely love my MPK Mini Play. It may not be the greatest keyboard in the world, and other MIDI controllers may be better, but this one does everything I wanted it to do and more. I'm certainly happy!
A**A
What an amazing little thing!
We bought it initially for my dad as a gift, but my partner wouldn't stop playing with it too, so we ended up buying another one. There are so many functions and the sound is really great. Lots of options to be still explored by my men to create lovely music and have a great fun!
T**R
I love this machine!
I'm not a musician but I enjoy working out how to play tunes that I know. The sounds on this machine are reasonable and love the fact that it's polyphonic. The small speaker is understandably poor but I use headphones all the time so there's no problem. My only problem is with keys which are a bit small for my fingers but I'm sure I'll get used to that.I haven't tried the online software provided by Akai but I'll get round to it.
D**C
Great piece of kit
Now this is probably one of the best musical instruments that I have purchased. I love the stand alone keyboard feature which lets you play up to 128 different styles of instruments. The output is quiet, but connect to a amp and it really sounds brilliant. It comes with MPC beats software which is quite complex but allows playing with rythyms, backing etc. The internal sounds selector knob should have been larger as it is one of the most used controls in my world. I love the fact that you can change the octaves up and down each to 4 levels. It is also battery powered when using as stand alone keyboard, and I would have preferred to see a PSU input, but uses USB power when connected to laptop. Overall brill.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
3 weeks ago