greatest prog keyboard player |
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cynthiasmallet
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 01 2007 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 545 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 11:28 | |
My favourite is Banks, in terms of musical sympathy the mans a genius. However the best player is Wakeman at the end of the day, so he got the vote.
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b_olariu
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 02 2007 Location: Romania Status: Offline Points: 5534 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 13:40 | |
Tony Banks is one of my favorites musicians ever. I think his skills and way of playing at keys are unique in every way. But i also like Emerson and Wakeman but there is many more great key players that you forget to list here.
Where is Kerry Minnear from Gentle Giant, one of the most inteligent and skillfull musician ever
where is Ken Hensley from Uriah Heep, very important key player in prog music in my opinion
where is John Lord from Deep Purple
where is John Tout from Renaissance, one of the most inventive key player from his decade
where is Peter Bardens from Camel
where is Hugh Banton from Van der Graaf Generator, and many many stunning musicians that you forget to mention here. They are among my favourites key players from entire prog music, and they are from old school, not to mention others from '80 and '90 and from today.
This poll in my opinion is so so, not good not better then others, anyway is forgetable, sorry to be so rude.
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R o V e R
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 13 2005 Location: India Status: Offline Points: 2747 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 13:45 | |
'Kieth Emerson'
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TGM: Orb
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 21 2007 Location: n/a Status: Offline Points: 8052 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 15:07 | |
I'm a Wright-fan, but he's not there *glares*
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Evandro Martini
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 08 2006 Status: Offline Points: 183 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 23:24 | |
What's this 'Tarantula technique'? |
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"You’ll never make any money playing music that people can’t sing.” Keith Emerson's father
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rileydog22
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2005 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 8844 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 23:26 | |
On the 'tron, you can only hold a note for 8 seconds before the tape runs out. The "tarantula" or "spider" technique involves slowly crawling from one inversion of a chord to another in order to hold a mellotron chord for more than 8 seconds.
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Evandro Martini
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 08 2006 Status: Offline Points: 183 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 23:34 | |
Keith Emerson - 10
Rick Wakeman - 9.999 Tony Banks - 9.9 But I will always remind you that Banks is a complete jerk. Nowadays he tells everyone about how he hated playing long songs with ridiculous lyrics and complex solos, and says he only did it because he had a weak personality and Peter Gabriel and the others drove him to do it. |
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"You’ll never make any money playing music that people can’t sing.” Keith Emerson's father
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Empathy
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1864 |
Posted: December 07 2007 at 23:39 | |
Have you ever tried to create a decent-sounding synthesizer sound from scratch? It ain't easy, even using the most modern technology. It's truly an art form, in fact.
Not that Rudess is particularly adept at that, IMO. In fact, that's my main beef with him: he uses the same 5 patches or so over and over and over again. He's a ridiculously skilled player, however. I went with Tony, who will sometimes understate his playing in order to fit the song. Edited by Empathy - December 07 2007 at 23:41 |
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Pure Brilliance:
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agProgger
Forum Groupie Joined: November 20 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 54 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 05:23 | |
^ Are you talking about getting the sound samples, looping them, adding decay times, etc., or are you talking about physically building a synthesizer? If it's the latter, I wouldn't include that in my calculations, unless it was for who was a better electrical/sound engineer.
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Friend of the honest; enemy of the arrogant and closed-minded.
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Norbert
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 20 2005 Location: Hungary Status: Offline Points: 2506 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 07:37 | |
The Noccenzi brothers deserve a mention when keyboard players are discussed. |
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cynthiasmallet
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 01 2007 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 545 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 07:41 | |
Well said, Lord and Bardens beat all (other than Banks) on this list. |
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Would you like to watch TV, or get between the sheets, or contemplate the silent freeway, would you like something to eat?
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Zargus
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 08 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 3491 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 08:02 | |
Hugh Banton, Mike Ratledge, David Sinclair & Dave Stewart are some that comes to mind, but ofc theres loades of more that constantly gets ignored..
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 08:13 | |
Off that list, Keith Emerson.
But i LOVE Kerry Minear, Peter Bardens, Mike Ratledge, David Sinclair...
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Bj-1
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 04 2005 Location: No(r)Way Status: Offline Points: 31619 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 10:31 | |
So I have heard as well.
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RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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micky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 10:37 | |
12 votes for Banks... damn...some of you need a Genesis enima..
another vote for Emo... and his work...and his legacy speaks volumes as for why... or this shall suffice... Could there be such a thing as a keyboardist not familiar with the works of Keith Emerson? Not in awe of his historic place in the annals of electronic musical evolution? As the first musician ever to use a modular Moog synthesizer on stage, Emerson accomplished the Herculean task of pulling the spotlight over to the keyboard section, incorporating outrageous theatrics and amazing chops to create an unmistakable presence. From their inception in 1970, Emerson, Lake and Palmer achieved instant fame with their unique blend of modern technology and classical orchestration. Their first single, entitled "Lucky Man," ended with a startling new sound, the first featured lead synthesizer solo. This sound took the music world by storm, and their first five albums went platinum. Keith Emerson himself has consistently won the Overall Best Keyboardist award in the annual Keyboard Magazine readers’ poll since the magazine debuted in 1975. |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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YesGoblin
Forum Groupie Joined: December 07 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 63 |
Posted: December 08 2007 at 10:47 | |
Keith Emerson is probably the best from a technically point of view but there are many others that are arguably more interesting. Rick Wakeman is a close second and although hes not as great from a Prog perspective, John Lord is also amazing. For instance the solo from "Burn".
another interesting player is Claudio Simonetti from the Band Goblin who have done countless scores for Dario Argento movies as well as the score for the US Movie DAWN OF THE DEAD Edited by YesGoblin - December 08 2007 at 10:49 |
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Empathy
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1864 |
Posted: December 09 2007 at 00:55 | |
Well, you're talking about sampling, which is also an art form in itself. I'm referring to the process of designing a sound from the ground up using the existing architecture of a given synthesizer, vs. simply using the "presets". Actually designing and building a synthesizer would be an entirely different category, I agree... which is why I'm in awe of people like the late Bob Moog. Edited by Empathy - December 09 2007 at 00:57 |
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Pure Brilliance:
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agProgger
Forum Groupie Joined: November 20 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 54 |
Posted: December 09 2007 at 03:54 | |
That's what I thought. I'm actually doing something like that tomorrow for a final in a Music and Technology course I'm taking, except that it's with weird, cavernous noises instead of set notes. We use a program called Kontakte... it's pretty cool. |
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Friend of the honest; enemy of the arrogant and closed-minded.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 09 2007 at 05:45 | |
Creating sounds in hardware, either using basic electronics to build sound generators and modifiers or by building modules (http://www.synthtech.com/), is enormous fun but costly. From a technical point of view there is nothing difficult in doing this - the principles are easy enough to grasp even with a rudimentary understanding of electronics - even if you forsake the Analogue world (::shudder::) and go Digital, small PIC processors are ideal for sound synthesis. Sadly, many of my home-based projects stalled from lack of funds rather than lack of knowledge.
There is another (cheaper) route to hardware sound synthesis where you use circuit-bending (modifying) to get new sounds cheap electronic toys and other gadgets http://www.oddmusic.com/illogic/index.html
On the software front there is a program called Csound that uses a C like language to create sounds and then allows you to form those sounds into compositions. http://www.csounds.com/
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What?
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jimmy_row
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 11 2007 Location: Hibernation Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
Posted: December 09 2007 at 12:17 | |
Voted for Tony B...cuz he can never have "too many" votes. He did more tricky, subtle things than Wakeman and Emo, and he was a far better songwriter.
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Signature Writers Guild on strike
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