
Alesis Recital Grand 88-Key Digital Piano Weighted
Graded hammer action and 128-voice polyphony in an 88-key digital piano built for serious practice and performance.
*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jun 04, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.
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Overview
Key Features
It’s Time to Upgrade your Electric Piano - 88 key piano keyboard with graded hammer action and adjustable touch response for a natural piano feel - for beginner, intermediate and advanced players
Packed with Premium Sounds - 16 multi-sampled voices including Grand Piano, Electric Piano, Organ, Synthesizers & more; simultaneous Split & Layer modes; 5 adjustable Reverb FX
Authentic Playing Experience - 128 max polyphony provides a superb 88 key piano playing experience; 50W micro-array speaker system sounds loud, clear and realistic in any setting
Stage Piano Essentials - Stereo 1/4” (6.35mm) outputs; 1/4” (6.35mm) and 1/8” (3.5mm) headphone outputs; USB-MIDI output for use with educational software or virtual synths
The Complete Full Size Keyboard Piano Experience - Sustain pedal, music rest, and power adapter included; Lesson & Record Modes to develop your electric keyboard piano skills
Specifications
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- Graded hammer action with adjustable touch response accurately maps velocity curves to playing weight, supporting technique development across skill levels.
- 128-note polyphony eliminates note-stealing during sustain-heavy playing and complex chord passages where lesser instruments drop voices.
- Simultaneous Split and Layer modes expand the sonic palette without requiring external processing or a second instrument.
- 50W micro-array speaker system delivers sufficient volume and clarity for room-filling practice without external amplification.
- Dual headphone outputs (1/4" and 1/8") allow silent practice or teacher-student monitoring simultaneously.
👎 Cons
- No USB audio output — the instrument requires an external audio interface and analog 1/4" cables to capture audio into a DAW, adding friction for home recording.
- The onboard reverb effects (5 adjustable presets) lack the depth and flexibility of standalone reverb units or DAW-based convolution reverbs at a professional session level.
- No sustain pedal with half-damper support — the included pedal is a simple on/off switch, which limits dynamic control during classical repertoire requiring nuanced sustain technique.
- Stand is not included, which adds to the total cost of ownership for players who do not already have a compatible keyboard stand.
- 16 voices cover core categories but the synthesis architecture is sample-based with limited parameter editing, constraining sound design flexibility.