The Casio Casiotone MT-40 is a musical keyboard, formerly produced by Casio and originally developed for the consumer market. It is 9 voice polyphonic, with 37 main keys and 15 smaller bass keys. Eight notes may be played on the main keys, and one note on the bass. The bass section has one timbre, and the main section has 22, assignable to one of four presets. Like most small Casio keyboards, it also has a drum section with 6 different beats, a tempo knob, and a "fill" button. The fill button plays sixteenth note pulses of either the "snare" or "kick" as long as it is held down. Production started in the early 1980s and ceased shortly thereafter. The successor of the MT-40 came with a gray case, and was sold as the MT-41.
Brazilian/British composer Ritchie used the Casio MT-30 in his Brazil soap soundtrack Menina Veneno (1982).
Composer Ralph Jones used the Casio MT-30 with cymbals and crystal glasses in his score to Amy Holden Jones's horror feature film: Slumber Party Massacre (1982).
And I smiled from the scars
The tramps in the park
Are going to shoot me
But I’m ready
Kneel to bleed
Fast to your knees
In a movie
Dark loved me
Open with death
A life that is well
And you’re floating
Are you drowning?
Kneel to bleed
Fast to your knees
In a movie
Dark loved me
Oh, now you know it’s not worth your time
Buy your college film
It’s worth a shot
You panned it up
And left and right
It was good enough for me
Now you know it’s not worth your time
Buy your college film
It’s worth a shot
You panned it up
And left and right
It was good enough for me
She walks in disguise
The tramps in the park
Oh, they shoot me
But I’m ready
Oh, you kneel to bleed
So fast to your knees
In a movie