What's your favorite keyboard ever? |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 16913 |
Posted: May 25 2010 at 20:44 | |
Piano and Church Organ
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jammun
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 14 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 3449 |
Posted: May 25 2010 at 22:13 | |
Keyboards. Ones I've personally owned: the Yamaha Motif. Lust for the sound of: the venerable Mellotron. Biggest Baddest Ass on the planet: the Hammond B-3. Perhaps the most influential: the venerable Mini-Moog.
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Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon. |
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MarkOne
Forum Groupie Joined: August 18 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 90 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 03:22 | |
There are just too many, I could never make my mind up...
Hammond B3/C3 (they are the same thing, of course) MiniMoog Yamaha CS80 Oberheim OB8 Prophet 5 Roland Jupiter8 ARP Odyssey Mellotron (If it would stay in tune/not wear out tapes/not catch fire) Of the keys I actually own/have owned, Korg Prophecy, lovely screaming lead synth, Alesis Fusion, brilliant sounding workstation if you treat it right. Though more and more, I am leaning to Apple Mainstage, and choosing the best virtual recreations of my all time faves (It means I can pack a master keyboard and a laptop and have a rig that would have taken a truck once - I KNOW it's not really the same, but a, I could never afford the above list, and b, through the average rubbish PA nobody will tell a classic 1962 B3 from NI-B4II
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npjnpj
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 05 2007 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 2720 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 04:14 | |
Did I miss it, or has the Fender Rhodes really not been mentioned?
This then, together with the Hammond B3. |
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Tursake
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 15 2010 Location: Oulu, Finland Status: Offline Points: 382 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 05:54 | |
Hammond B3
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Last.fm: TursakeX RYM: Tursake |
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19535 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 17:31 | |
Try a 1984 Casiotone.
Appart from this, I agree, even the cheesy Farfisa can sound great in good hands (check The Doors)
Iván
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UndercoverBoy
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2009 Location: Tulsa, OK, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 5148 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 22:04 | |
Hammond is the masteliest of them all, of course!
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himtroy
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 20 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1601 |
Posted: June 21 2010 at 23:11 | |
I love my keys. My Hammond L-100 and my Rhodes.
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Which of you to gain me, tell, will risk uncertain pains of hell?
I will not forgive you if you will not take the chance. |
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: June 22 2010 at 04:54 | |
Fred Frith uses a Casio 101 on Cheap At Half The Price to good effect. Are we talking the same instrument? Before my Korg, there was this really cheap thing at home, and I don't even remember what it was, destroyed in a house fire. But I got it to make some interesting stuff. Of course I was just fooling around. I think what sparked my interest in keyboards had to be one set of grandparents having a decent functional electric organ at home, two tiers of keys baby as I recall and foot pedals, and the other ones having a kind of dysfunctional antique. |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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warrplayer
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 18 2010 Location: Charlotte, NC Status: Offline Points: 111 |
Posted: June 24 2010 at 21:18 | |
Kawai k5000s, but then my favorite food is pizza, but I'd get real sick of it if that's all I had to eat for a few days.
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Ronnie Pilgrim
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 09 2010 Location: The South of TX Status: Offline Points: 771 |
Posted: June 24 2010 at 21:56 | |
This
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WalterDigsTunes
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 11 2007 Location: SanDiegoTijuana Status: Offline Points: 4373 |
Posted: June 24 2010 at 21:58 | |
Hey, watch it! My Casiotone 7000 knows where you live |
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pitfall
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 22 2012 Location: Essex, England Status: Offline Points: 109 |
Posted: July 09 2012 at 18:09 | |
I have a Rhodes, which is fantastic (the Rhodes, not the fact that I own it) but my '69 Wurlitzer 200 is just as good.
I always wanted a Minimoog since I was at school, but they have been too expensive or too cronky. Now there is the Macbeth Micromac. Costs as much as a secondhand Voyager - but it has all the sonic muscle and power of the Mini. Check it out on Youtube.
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator Retired Admin & Razor Guru Joined: February 02 2004 Location: South England Status: Offline Points: 14693 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 06:20 | |
I used to own an EMU Vintage Keys, which had some good Mellotron samples, but if you want the true sound without the cost/constant repair bills, this is the beast for you: Memotron (by Manikin Electronic) Not cheap, but a superb digital copy, with the correct feel & look, too (even Edgar Froese is using one these days, which has to be a recommendation)
I'm rather fond of my 1971 Hammond L122 too |
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012 |
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Horizons
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: January 20 2011 Location: Somewhere Else Status: Offline Points: 16952 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 12:05 | |
Tony Banks!
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Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.
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Fox On The Rocks
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 10 2011 Location: Toronto, Canada Status: Offline Points: 5012 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 14:49 | |
A Fender Rhodes would be nice too! Edited by Fox On The Rocks - July 16 2012 at 14:50 |
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Fox On The Rocks
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 10 2011 Location: Toronto, Canada Status: Offline Points: 5012 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 14:52 | |
Keep it funky. |
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smartpatrol
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 15 2012 Location: My Bedroom Status: Offline Points: 14169 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 15:18 | |
Well, the only one I've used is the Casio CTK-4000, which I've had for about a year and a half now, which is really great. |
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Gerinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 10 2010 Location: Barcelona Spain Status: Offline Points: 5154 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 16:35 | |
Difficult question, perhaps the Moog, Mini-Moog and Mellotron gave the most distictive sounds in Prog. The Hammond was huge but it was already there before Prog kicked in.
ARPs were also important, as well as Farfisas, the Hohner Clavinet and the Rhodes.
Technologically the Synclavier was a real blast though it was not really a keyboard but a sampler system.
BTW this is a nice video of Pat Metheny showing his Synclavier controlled from his Roland guitar controller in the mid 80's.
Not related to the question but listen to his words in the last minute of the video, most proggers will like them
Edited by Gerinski - July 16 2012 at 16:37 |
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moogprodigy
Forum Groupie Joined: July 22 2008 Status: Offline Points: 40 |
Posted: July 21 2012 at 23:48 | |
My micro korg sampler. Because I can sample anything, and it's super light to take to gigs. I just wish it had a monophonic mode for blistering minimoog solos.
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