⌨️ Travel light, play loud: your studio fits in your bag!
The Keyboard Garagekey Mini by Miditech is a compact 37-key USB MIDI controller designed for musicians and producers who demand portability without sacrificing quality. Featuring high-quality dynamic keys and robust USB MIDI connectivity, it delivers professional-grade performance in a travel-friendly package.
W**D
Most practical mini keyboard
37 keys is just (barely) enough to do anything involving 2 hands, so this keyboard is preferable to the typical mini which has only 25. The keybed is good and firm, and as small and light as you can go without being too small. Keys are the same size as the MPK Mini II, but they are about 50% firmer--which is reasonable as any weaker than the MPK would feel flimsy. Akai, however, was clever enough to put the USB port on the side of the Mini, which is my only complaint about the Garagekey: having the port on the back interferes with the likely use-case of shoving this guy just in front of your computer keyboard.Assuming you don't need the pads and dials of an MPK Mini, start with this instead for practicality and affordability. Obviously this is not a replacement for a full sized midi keyboard. If you are going to do anything approaching normal hand and finger position, get one of those (e.g. the excellent MPK249 if you need pads, dials, sliders, etc).
K**Y
Works Well! One Small Issue
The keyboard works as intended and it’s perfectly simple for my needs, but the D key on the upper octave doesn’t press and hold. The key will play when pressed, but the note will not continue if held (slightly frustrating but a minor issue)
F**N
Small , easy to play, sounds great!
So I went a little keyboard crazy and bought five different compact portable midi controllers, and guess which one is my favorite? For some reason, when I record myself playing in Garageband, the recordings I make with this keyboard sound the most realistic. I am not an expert or an advanced player, but I think the velocity sensitivity on this model best captures the subtleties of an actual piano compared to the other velocity sensitive models I tried. I measured the keyboard to be approximately 17.5" x 4.5" with the height a little less than 1.25" -- an absolutely compact unit that will be great for travel or throwing into a backpack to play at a coffee shop (with my earbuds, of course).The only thing that the manufacturer could improve upon would be to make the keys less stiff so that they would not require more pressure than usual to play. With that being the only negative, I am more than happy to work around it and am enjoying the keyboard.If you're new to MIDI keyboards, please note that the keyboard itself will not produce any sound unless it is plugged into a device that has a music app such as Garageband.
V**T
I should give this 3 and half stars. It ...
I should give this 3 and half stars. It helped me for some of my projects, but the unit itself is not very exciting.
E**N
Mine wasn't playable
I have been looking for a basic MIDI keyboard. I only want inputs, I'm OK doing everything else in software, so I figured this would be perfect. No bells or whistles, no extra features I don't need, and rock-bottom prices.I was really excited taking it out of the box. It didn't feel cheap -- it was weighted nicely and had a good feel. It worked directly out of the box, no software required, with a basic USB-A to USB-C converter and my Macbook. But that was when my excitement ended.Unfortunately, mine wasn't really playable. The keys are extremely stiff and inconsistently weighted, so applying the same pressure across the notes of a basic chord meant I got wildly different velocities for each key (from 30 to 80). Getting to 100 velocity isn't even possible on every key and requires really pounding on the keys for which it is possible.I'd be OK pounding on it, since again I'm ok doing a lot in software, but it's not balanced for that: If you slam the front of the keys, the whole keyboard lifts up, causing it to move on the desk.Combined, these things mean it's not really playable. You might be able to use it to input basic chords one at a time, but you cannot string them together into a song using the keyboard alone.
K**I
Smallest (as far as I can find on Internet) + minimalist 37 keys keyboard + Linux support!
Just bought one and received today, this is the smallest 37 keys keyboard I can find on Internet, without any unnecessary features, AND Linux kernel has out-of-box support for this keyboard! Cheers! (tested on ubuntu 20.04)It would be awesome if it can be lighter and slimmer for taking out.The USB port can be shaken slightly, a little worry its robustness.Considering to buy one more, but it has out-of-stock... Wonder know does this mean some successor model is going to come out?! If so, I'm looking forward to it!
C**H
Plug and play simplicity
Nice tactical feel, great with Garage Band. Simple and straightforward for anyone not particularly interested in bells and whistles. I thought the touch of the keyboard was balanced and well thought out.
C**R
"Bang for the buck" keyboard+sofwares.
I like this keyboard so far its small and works good, I had a samson graphite 49 and a m audio key station before but never used the extra knobs or weels because im not a professional musician i just make tunes for fun on fl studio, this is way better then using my laptops keys to play an instrument..oh and it comes with free downloadable softwares so you can get started if you dont own any daws.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago