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Aztech
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Joined: February 11 2004
Location: Montreal
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Topic: Favorite Keyboards/Sounds Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:11 |
What are your favorite keyboards and sounds used in Prog ?
Personally I like analog keyboards like Bob Moog's famous Minimoog used by most prog masters
and also the VCS used by Pink Floyd for those amazing sounds on Dark side of the Moon & Wish you were here.
I love the mellotron sounds but I would never play a real one live ; that thing is a mechanical nightmare waiting to happen not to say that the others were perfect ie: the Minimoog would constantly detune on stage !
As for the digital keyboards I'd go for the Tony Banks / Genesis string sounds on the Roland Jupiter 8 .
Your turn !
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Tauhd Zaļa
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Joined: February 18 2004
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:16 |
Yes,
Like you I think the best sounds belong to the Minimoog (the first produced) but also :
Mellotron
Prophet V
...and Roland (I have a J8, JV 1080 and D50)
PS : ARP 2600 used by Tony Banks at the beginning is also wonderfull
Edited by Tauhd Zaļa
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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diddy
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Joined: March 02 2004
Location: Germany
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:18 |
I don't know anything about Keyboards, but I know that I really like Jordan Rudess's ( ) sound wehn he plays solos.
Can be heard here:
Liquid Tension Experiment
Dream Theater (Stream of Consciousness, Dance of Eternity)
Jordan Rudess Solo albums (Feeding the wheel)
and I know, that he's using "Kurzweil" Keyboards...
But I also love the sound coming out of Keith Emerson's moog
Edited by diddy
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If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear...
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Tauhd Zaļa
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:22 |
Yes, Kurzweil : great sound (mainly for piano) but so expensive
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The State Of Grace Is Achieved
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Jim Garten
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:22 |
This isn't the fisrt time I have opined on my favorite subject, but I have to again........ That wonder of the 20th century, the Hammond Organ.
This instrument plays such a major role in Progressive Rock, and its leading exponents are too numerous to mention in full, but for examples:
Keith Emmerson
Tony Banks
Rick Wakeman
Dave Greenslade
The list goes on......... One day, this list may even include yours truly , as I finally caved in to the dreams of my mis-spent youth & bought one of the beasts a while ago & am now taking lessons.
In addition to the above, of course, the Mellotron - lovely sounds, absolute nightmare as a touring musical instrument (King Crimson actually used 2 on stage at one point - I pity their poor keyboard technicians, not to mention the roadies, who had to lift the beasts!!)
The Moog....... aaah! Nuff said ("the bugger's gone out of tune again"....... "both oscillators have failed....AGAIN")
Happy days.... when keyboard players were surrounded by huge pieces of furniture, as opposed to sitting in front of what looks like a small coffee table, as is the case today.
Little piece of trivia for you, Tony Banks bought his first Mellotron from none other than Robert Fripp.
Edited by Jim Garten
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:41 |
Hammond B3. Leslie speakers spinning beautifully............... ahhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!
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Aztech
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Joined: February 11 2004
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 11:47 |
Ah yessss : The Arp 2600 sounds... One sound well known is the First few notes played in Close Encounter of the Third Kind.
"Kurzweil" Keyboards they are OK (I have one: K1200) but they are late comers in the game and are of the digital synth/sampler genre.
The Hammond B3 Organ : yes a classic for sure ! used by Focus ,YES etc...
Tony had a different type of Hammond the L100 model I think ?
I did not know this cool trivia :Tony Banks bought his first Mellotron from none other than Robert Fripp.
I wish Keyboard players would go back to the majestic "U" shape keboard placement with all the knobs and buttons .That was so cool looking ! Now mostly all you have are 2 boring black keyboards atop one another with an unnoticeable black stand.How cold !
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lucas
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Posted: March 17 2004 at 17:31 |
diddy wrote:
I don't know anything about Keyboards, but I know that I really like Jordan Rudess's ( ) sound wehn he plays solos.
Can be heard here:
Liquid Tension Experiment
Dream Theater (Stream of Consciousness, Dance of Eternity)
Jordan Rudess Solo albums (Feeding the wheel)
and I know, that he's using "Kurzweil" Keyboards...
But I also love the sound coming out of Keith Emerson's moog
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Jordan Rudess also released two fabulous solo keyboard albums : "Secrets of the muse" and "4NYC".
He played some keyboards on ANNIE HASLAM's "Blessing in disguise".
He played with DIXIE DREGS on their last studio album : "Full circle".
He formed with Rod Morgenstein the RUDESS-MORGENSTEIN PROJECT.
Recently, he joined David Bowie for the album "Heathen".
His solos are always a great delight.
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"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Jim Garten
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 04:56 |
Aztech wrote:
The Hammond B3 Organ : yes a classic for sure ! used by Focus ,YES etc...
Tony had a different type of Hammond the L100 model I think ?
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Oh dear, I'm gonna sound like such an annorak, now!
Focus used an L100 in the early days, but now Van Leer uses a B3, Wakeman always used a C3 & Tony Banks used the T500 series.
Emmerson actually used a C3 and an L100 on stage.....
Just thought I'd clarify that for you - sorry..... what a saddo
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Alexander
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 11:50 |
Moogs are always good. I do enjoy fuzz organs!
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On A Dilemmia Between What I Need & What I Just Want
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Aztech
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 14:24 |
HI Jim,
You seem to really know your Keyboard stuff !
I know the C3 : an electronic version of the B3 by korg I believe.
I read a long while back Tony used a L100 but I may be mistaken.
the T500 : don't know that one
Yes Van Leer does use a B3 now : I saw him last year in Montreal .Great Show !
I actually have a Book called Vintage Syntesizers from keyboard magasine its a great book to get if you don't already have it.
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richardh
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 15:34 |
Keith Emerson on the Hammond C3 does it for me.The Moog synth is a great instrument as well.(Especially when it sprouts wings and goes up in a puff of smoke!!) You can't really beat those old analog sounds!
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benny bouncer
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 16:20 |
Emerson's moog modular system has always amazed me. It is a piece of genious!!!!! the Hammond L100 makes a good sound aswell....i suppose Korg aint bad, but i prefer hammond!!
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Stormcrow
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Joined: February 05 2004
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 21:00 |
danbo wrote:
Hammond B3. Leslie speakers spinning beautifully............... ahhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!! |
It just doesn't get better than that.
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Ulf Uggason
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Joined: March 09 2004
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Posted: March 18 2004 at 21:35 |
I don't know diddley-squat about the specs and capabilities of keyboards, but I know what I like. Warm, fat sounds from synths, and ooomphy deep organ sounds. Basically, I feel old = good, new = bad. However, I may be speaking in complete ignorance. But my ears tell me a lot. A lot of modern keyboards, especially the ones people use on stage today, sound like cheeze whiz.
I may sound like a broken record, but Moogs, Mellotrons, and HAMMOND f**kIN' ORGANS!!!!! YEAH!
Peace,
Ulf
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Jim Garten
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Posted: March 19 2004 at 02:59 |
Aztech wrote:
HI Jim,
I know the C3 : an electronic version of the B3 by korg I believe.
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This is sooooooooooo sad......
sorry Aztech, but I had to come back at you, the C3 is a Hammond, not a Korg (essentially a Hammond B3 but in what they called a 'Church Style' console) - Korg make (I believe) the CX3 & BX3, which are their Hammond clones, and very good in their way (certainly more portable!!!!), but not the real deal
Edited by Jim Garten
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Glass-Prison
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Joined: February 08 2004
Location: Canada
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Posted: March 19 2004 at 08:47 |
There's no question about it. The Cinema Show has one of the most beautiful keyboard solos ever... It's beauty in a can, and all you have to do is pop the lid
Other than that... I'd have to say emerson's virtuso work, especially on Trilogy, and ELP's debut album.
Rudess is another exceptional keyboardist, and provides the sound that Dream Theater was looking for after dropping Moore and Sherinan.
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Raelynn
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Joined: March 16 2004
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Posted: March 19 2004 at 13:07 |
I love Rudess' keyboard playing. It's amazing some of the runs and such he plays in LTE. He's definitely my favorite of the three DT keyboardists (though each were exceptionally good)
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philippe
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Posted: March 20 2004 at 07:12 |
I personnaly like all vintage stuffs before the coming of real analog synth...I love the use of electric organ 'Teisco' and 'Farfisa' by Schulze or Froese at the beginning of their career...I also love the sound of the melotron choir, the mini and big Moog. 'Affenstunde', the first album in prog rock only composed on the big Moog is incredible...deeply spacey and etheral...
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The Owl
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 19 2004
Location: United States
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Points: 363
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Posted: March 20 2004 at 16:16 |
Mellotron/Chamberlin: Those eerie strings, those spooky flutes, the stark brass, the vague, hazy vibes, the chilling choirs! YEAH BAAAYYYY BAAAYYYYYYY!!!!!
Any Hammond Organ!
That funky Clavinet!
Fender Rhodes and Wurlitzer electric pianos!
And the Hohner Pianet (which also had a very cool guitar-like sound when run through a distortion pedal, on the 1973 Genesis live album, Tony Banks harmonized with Hackett using this, sounds like Hacket had a harmonizer, though he actually didn't)
And the very unlikely Stylo-Phone (employed by Anna Holmgren of Anglagard when I saw them at NEAR Fest last year:
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People are puzzled why I don't dig the Stones, well, I listened to the Stones, I tried, and I tried, and I tried, and--I Can't Get No Satisfaction!
www.myspace.com/theowlsmusic
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