Congratulations and welcome to the wonderful world of keyboards!
Exactly what the world needs, more keyboardists and fewer guitarists.
You said that you just started keyboards, but you didn't say whether
you just started with music as a whole...so I don't know how familiar
you are with music theory, if at all. As Rick Wakeman once said,
"you are only as good as your vocabulary" so what you should do is
learn the basics of theory as a start. You could always play "by
ear", but wouldn't it be better to know what you are doing?
A quick and dirty way to get up to speed would be to do one (or a combination) of the following:
1. Find a piano teacher and take lessons.
2. Pick up one of those
Piano For Dummies,
Music Theory For Dummies or similar book and devour it.
3. Get a beginner keyboard that has a few basic functions, but
includes a teaching or lesson function. Several of the
inexpensive (less than $400.00) keyboards by Yamaha and Casio have
features such as teaching mode, light up "follow the key" modes, etc.,
which can help you learn.
Once you have an instrument and a guide (be it a teacher, book, or
automated), it is time to practice! Can you spend 30-60 minutes a
day with your instrument? Practice...practice...practice!
Get to where you understand your scales, modes, and chords (and inversions)
Once you are familiar with music theory and can read music, I would
suggest finding a copy of a book which (iirc) is called
Hannon
Exercises For The Virtuoso Pianist or similar title. These
are a series of scale/fingering exercises to develop dexterity in both
hands.
Lastly, while a Voyager is way cool, are you sure this is what you
want? I have only played one once, but I believe that the Voyager
is monophonic like the original MiniMoog. This means that only
one note sounds at a time, hence no chords. Plus, a Voyager runs
around $2600 to $3000. For that kind of money you could get
a very nice Korg, Roland, Kurzweil, or Nord synth which are polyphonic
and expandable. If you are set in the idea of getting an analog
sounding lead synth like the Moog, check out the Korg MS-2000B.
At $750, it is a lot cheaper than the Moog. It is not as fat
sounding, but very close. Plus it has 4-note capability, delay
(does the Voyager have a delay?), and a way cool vocoder!
Have fun and remember: PRACTICE!