The questions below answer the most common doubts when starting piano or synthesizer. The goal is to keep things simple: clear guidance, no jargon, and no pressure.
Yes. A synthesizer is more than enough to get started: you can learn rhythm, melodies, and hand coordination without investing in an acoustic piano.
A 61-key keyboard with touch-sensitive (velocity-sensitive) keys is a good choice: it remains affordable, compact, and suitable for the first years of learning.
Consistency matters more than duration. Practicing 5 to 10 minutes a day is enough to improve if you practice regularly and slowly.
No. You can begin with simple references (hands, notes, rhythms) and learn gradually. Sheet music becomes useful later to progress more efficiently.
Choose a very simple goal (for example: 1 exercise + 1 short piece), play slowly, and note your small victories. The idea is to make practice easy to repeat.
