You cannot find a style named “Tabla,” but these can be adapted using the Indian Kit and adjusting the drum track:
| Style Name (Latin/World Category) | How to Adapt |
|-----------------------------------|---------------|
| Bollywood 1 / Bollywood 2 | Go to Mixer → Change Drum track to IndianKit. Mute bass/chords. Keep only percussion. |
| FunkPop (slow tempo ~80 BPM) | Replace drum with IndianKit → Use for Keherwa (8-beat) or Dadra (6-beat). |
| 8BeatModern | Replace kick/snare with Tabla Dayan (Dha = E2? Use Keymap). |
Key Mapping for IndianKit (typical Yamaha):
💡 Tip: Go to
Voice Edit→DrumKit→IndianKitand note which keys produce which tabla syllables. indian tabla styles for yamaha psr s 710
Keherwa_8Beat.Before engaging with the keyboard’s features, one must understand the target: Tabla is a pair of hand drums—the smaller right-hand dayan (treble) and the larger left-hand bayan (bass). Rhythmic cycles, or talas, include Teental (16 beats), Keherwa (8 beats), Dadra (6 beats), Rupak (7 beats), and Jhaptaal (10 beats). The PSR-S710, through its sound design, attempts to map these nuanced strokes (e.g., Na, Tin, Dha, Ge, Ka) to MIDI notes.
What if your downloaded style uses a Rock Kit? You can fix it in 3 minutes.
Alternatively, simply change the Drum Voice of the style: Press [MIXER] > [STYLE TAB] > Change Channel 10’s voice from "Standard Kit 1" to "Indian Kit" or "Tabla Kit." You cannot find a style named “Tabla,” but
The S710 does not have a dedicated “Tabla Style” factory set. The most professional result comes from downloading SFF1 Indian styles from user groups (Facebook: “Yamaha PSR S710 Users”) or using MIDI files of tabla loops and playing along.
If you have access to a computer, use StyleMagic or CASM Editor to convert any SFF2 style to SFF1 – then load into your S710.
The Yamaha PSR-S710 supports Indian tabla styles primarily through external Expansion Packs or custom user-created styles, as authentic tabla rhythms are often not built-in by default. Authentic Indian Tabla Styles 💡 Tip: Go to Voice Edit → DrumKit
To achieve a professional sound, you can use style sets in SFF2 format, which are specifically designed for keyboards with an Indian Kit like the . Key styles available include: Classical Taals: Teen Taal, Ek Taal, Jhaptaal, and Rupak. Devotional & Folk: Bhajan, Qawwali, Dadra, and Bhangra.
Bollywood & Pop: Modern beats like "CoolBeat 4/4 with Tabla" and film-inspired rhythms. Where to Find & Download
You can source these styles from official and third-party creators:
A lighter, romantic cycle. Structure: 3/3.