Question for Soft Machine Fans |
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theblastocyst
Forum Groupie Joined: June 18 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 74 |
Topic: Question for Soft Machine Fans Posted: December 31 2007 at 15:47 |
Does anyone know what Mike Ratledge's keyboard setup was? (In specific, what is the keyboard he uses with the electric guitar fuzz sound?)
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rileydog22
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2005 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 8844 |
Posted: December 31 2007 at 23:51 |
I know the smooth electric piano-type one was a Hohner Pianet T, but I'm not sure what he used for the fuzz tone. Obviously some sort of organ, but I'm not sure what brand.
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Easy Money
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 11 2007 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 10617 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 15:56 |
I am not positive on this, but I believe Mike played a Lowrey organ on most Soft Machine albums. On their first two albums it sounds like he might use a Hammond some as well.
It sounds like he runs the Lowrey through a distortion pedal and then plays one note at a time producing that odd trademark sax like sound of his. Lowreys are more associated with home organs, whereas most rockers at that time used Hammonds and Farfisas. Edited by Easy Money - January 01 2008 at 21:04 |
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rileydog22
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2005 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 8844 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 16:33 |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 17:58 |
He definitely uses a Lowrey (infact, a Lowrey Holiday Deluxe), let me find out what model...
*does some searching* From a Richard Sinclair interview: "Mike Ratledge played Lowrey but he used to have a pedal that would drop it a semi-tone, which is a sound very particular to Mike." He also played Wurlitzer Piano and Fender Rhodes. Here you go: "Ratledge's first organ in Soft Machine was a Vox Continental, which he soon replaced with a Lowrey Holiday Deluxe, relatively inexpensive compared with the Hammond he would have preferred. The Lowrey had a number of features that Ratledge put to good use (e.g., note bending), but suffered from a "weedy" quality (Ratledge's word) that the keyboardist remedied by using a fuzz box. With this setup plugged into a Marshall stack, seriously deranged volume levels were possible, but feedback was hard to avoid in the silences between notes. In a real-world example of the cliché about necessity being the mother of invention (and perhaps an inevitable Zappa reference as well), Ratledge found he could prevent feedback by avoiding the between-note gaps and forging on with his solos in a legato style, relentlessly pushing forward like a circular-breathing saxophonist who never takes a gulp of air until his solo is completely finished. Brian Hopper is quoted in the Bennett book describing the Ratledge soloing approach as "uncompromising strings of notes, leaps of musical structure and texture, and complex time signatures that all characterize a style not heard before or since." Bennett himself notes that, although they had famously been used with guitars in rock music, "it was Mike Ratledge who apparently first thought of using a fuzz box with an organ." And fuzz organ soon became a signature sound of Canterbury-related keyboardists like Caravan's Dave Sinclair and Dave Stewart of Hatfield and the North and National Health. It should also be noted that, after replacing Kevin Ayers in Soft Machine, former band roadie Hugh Hopper was prompted to plug his bass into his own fuzz box in order to match the powerful overdriven burning tone of Ratledge's Lowrey." Edited by Geck0 - January 01 2008 at 18:01 |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 18:03 |
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Angelo
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: May 07 2006 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 13244 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 19:06 |
It is - with the left part of the Swingtime logo showing next to his elbow. |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 19:10 |
So is that his Wurlitzer at the back?
This a Lowrey Holiday Deluxe (with Genius): |
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rileydog22
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 24 2005 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 8844 |
Posted: January 01 2008 at 22:17 |
That would appear to be it.
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proger
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 03 2005 Location: Israel Status: Offline Points: 944 |
Posted: February 15 2008 at 05:36 |
cool I love his sound, its nice that he have the same sound a lot of SM album.
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...live for tomorrow...
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: February 15 2008 at 10:47 |
Oooh, i love that fuzzy sound
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Dick Heath
Special Collaborator Jazz-Rock Specialist Joined: April 19 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 12812 |
Posted: February 15 2008 at 11:59 |
There is one solo on jazz fusionist and oboeist Paul Hansos new album Frolic In The Land Of Plenty, where I swear his oboe sounds like Mike Ratledge attacking his Lowery on overdrive. So tell me please, did Ratledge's Lowry have a switch labelled "OBOE"?
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: February 15 2008 at 12:03 |
I know what you mean!
Sometimes you don't know if it's the Organ, or the Oboe/Saxello thing that's playing!
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Easy Money
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 11 2007 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 10617 |
Posted: February 15 2008 at 17:31 |
Most of those old organs have a stop for oboe as well as a lot of other orchestra instruments. On almost any organ the oboe stop is the best, for instance Wright in Floyd using the oboe stop on the Farfisa.
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