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bourniplus

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Everything posted by bourniplus

  1. One powered monitor with an 8" speaker would be my choice. If you don't want to pay for a QSC, look for those by Electro-Voice or Behringer. Others will surely have other companies to recommend. I have an EV with an 8" for when I don't want to carry my other EV that has a 12". I think it would have plenty of bass and volume if the drummer and guitarist are respectful.
  2. Hi, I have an old JC-77 and I love it, I use it mostly with my Rhodes. I also have two tube amps in a similar size (Fender Princeton Reverb and Peavey Classic 30). If I had to have only one I guess it would have to be a tube amp, but still the JC has its place. I'm sure it sounds great with the CP80. As you know, that stereo chorus is simply amazing, turn it on and you're instantly in the 80's. I replaced the original reverb tank in mine with one that gives a longer reverb, huge improvement. I don't know about the newer ones. It has always been pretty much trouble-free, although last year I had an intermittent noise problem. I opened it and found a small component (looked like a heat sink) that was slightly loose, I screwed it back to the circuit board and that solved it. I've found the schematics for it and downloaded it, if anyone needs it. (Somehow it was a bit hard to find through google.)
  3. While on the topic, listen to this version of Mr. Clean by Groove Holmes and Weldon Irvine on Rhodes: https://youtu.be/nGXgVcnvWYI That Bb is so out of tune, I'm guessing it was intentional. None of my Rhodes ever needed any significant tuning, pitch-wise. The answer the OP's question, I'd say Spain by Chick Corea on Light as a feather. If he meant a Rhodes-ONLY song, I can't think of any that had some kind of commercial success.
  4. I take out a tonewheel Hammond on gigs many times in a year. (Not that I'm pretending to be mentally sane.) To me it's not about how much the gig pays, it's more like a gift to myself. Many others here will also tell you that most often, instead of a chop, the solution is the roll-or-karis. I find it easier to roll the organ than to haul a 35 lbs keyboard. Flights of stairs are another story of course. To the OP, my vote goes to keeping the A100, and keep searching for a vintage Leslie.
  5. Tar and feather! Tar and feather!! I've also comitted heresy last week: I gigged my M100 without a Leslie, going straight in a 12" speaker. Actually it sounded great and was easy to mic. (No need to mic top and bottom, and no upper horn aiming in random direction in stop mode.) With the "magic" switch I added (which connects different points in the line box) , the scanner vibrato can sound pretty Leslie-like. I also had the fastest setup of the whole band!
  6. Hi Paul, if, as you say, you'd rather spend time on your Iphone and Ipad instead of making music and it makes you happy, then why not? However it seems that somehow you still have an interest in making music. You don't need any "instrument" to make music. Do you sing? As in, if your hear a note, can you sing that same note? Just a thought, maybe you could join a choir?
  7. It would seem that JSB had access to three 2-2/3' stops on the Thomaskirke organ of 1722: http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Topics/Bach-Organ.htm I don't know when mutation stops became common, but some of the French organ litterature of the 17th century specifically asks for them. I would guess that the 2-2/3' stops started to appear around the same time as the 2' ones! Last year while I was in Italy (doesn't that sound good!) I had the opportunity to try the old organ in Santa Maria in Vallicella church in Rome. I'm pretty sure it's from the 17th century, is mostly original with a historically conscious restoration. It has a 2-2/3' stop. It's still fully functionnal and can even be pumped by hand even though it has an electric blower. If I only knew how, I'd post pictures of it, and especially the single manual which has both D#/Eb, and G#/Ab! (yes, 14 keys per octave!)
  8. Great! Just a thought, following on what I wrote three years ago, you might try playing it in a one-bar pattern: R R L R - R L R R - L R R L - R R L (and a 16th-note rest) And in a two-bar pattern: R R L R - R L R R - L R R L - R R L R - R L R R - L R R L - R R L R - R L (and an 8th-note rest) Maybe along a click that gives an accent every four beats, or an actual drum beat, as slow as it needs to be.
  9. According to my owner's manual, I guess you can't. It says the MIDI channel is set for the whole program. (That's how they call each combination of 2 digital parts + analog + drums.) I remember seeing somewhere online a list of all the MIDI messages in details so maybe there's a workaround.
  10. While we're sharing our mistakes, a few months ago I did a gig with a "karaoke band" where the guests sign up many weeks in advance. We would only rehearse the trickiest songs before the gig, without the singers of course. So, this female guest comes on stage to sing her song, some kind of 80's power pop ballad that starts with a piano/vocal intro. This might be the big moment of her life, who knows. There was some ambiguity about the key between B flat or B (original? live? chart? requested by singer? facebook conversation?...). Among the band we settle for B. Somehow I have this huge brain fart and start the piano intro in B FLAT. By the time I figure out what's happening and the singer has come in, I try to tell the guitar player and bassist at the other end of the stage that I'M IN B FLAT, but they're staring at their charts. When the rest of the band joined in like a ton of brick, with loud distorted guitar and all, in B... oh man... that did not sound good. It took a few painful bars to settle on a key...
  11. Hi, as far as I know, there's only one way, and it's forward. Yes, what happened sucks, but what can you do to make sure it doesn't happen again? That's what matters. If you can't sleep and can't think of anything else... BREATHE... slowly and deeply. Really. As long as it takes. Others will probably come along with more keyboard-oriented suggestions. I've been gigging for almost 20 years and have triggered the totally wrong patch a few times. Now these events are just funny stories. Good luck, Martin
  12. @samuelblupowitz: If you have an interest in Hammonds but don't own one yet, I agree with the others, go grab it! I wouldn't trade my A100 for a B3. The tube reverb is awesome. Always room for one more Hammond! (I just got my fifth... and yes, I have a very understanding wife.)
  13. Well... like waygetter, I also just hate it and try to avoid it like the plague. The only times I've seen it sound "ok" was when the keyboard player used a breath controller. If it fits in your budget, a board that has this capability might be an option?
  14. Yeah seeing that pedalboard hurts my brain. I'm guessing someone took it apart and put it back together in a random fashion.
  15. The units listed above should all do the job nicely. Also, the old POD's can be found for very cheap and also work well. I have one that I sometimes use with my Rhodes. As far as I'm concerned, all of these sound pretty similar to one another. If you're a tone snob, deep down you know that you'll end up buying individual pedals later anyways!
  16. I finally did a transcription of this tune, I thought I'd share it with you guys: https://1drv.ms/b/s!Am7UqYdhEMpY8F-RfKcDK4Q1Q5zm ...and the Musescore file: https://1drv.ms/u/s!Am7UqYdhEMpY8F4bqPzcOcXj-cY7 Martin
  17. OP: Why "miss" it? There's still plenty of tonewheel Hammonds around to be enjoyed, and as far as I know, it's mostly a buyer's market all over the US. M3's go for free even though -in my opinion- they are marvels of engineering just like the consoles, and have most of the Hammond magic inside.
  18. Salut Ian, I'm not in Mtl area but thanks for the offer. Since it's happened only twice so far I'll keep cleaning them when it happens again, until it gets too frequent. I've once replaced all the contacts on my Roland controller, but I don't think it was a velocity issue, I think the notes were just dying one after the other.
  19. This. I think it's not only wasted, but counter-productive and unhealthy for the mind and body. There's only one way and it's forward! What really matters is what you're doing NOW to improve what you want to improve.
  20. Resurecting this thread because I had pretty much the same problem with another note, only worse. When I googled about it I stumbled on this thread. Funny thing is I didn't remember about the thread or even about the fact that I previously had that problem. Once again I opened the keyboard, cleaned the contacts in the rubber strip and now everything seems ok. I wonder how these contacts get dirty? This keyboard litterally spends its whole life in its case, besides 1 or 2 gigs a month... edit: putting the contact strip back wasn't that bad, what's wrong with you, me-from-four-years-ago?!
  21. 1A is music and everything related to instruments, building, modifying... 1B and 1C are far behind and would probably be homebrewing and chess. 20 years ago in junior college I remember about having to answer a similar question in class, and I gave the same answers. The thing that's changed in my homebrewing is that instead of using cheap kits, I now use my own fruit that I grow on my piece of land (that was just a dream back then). Chess come and go in my life but I've been pretty severely addicted for the last year. (about 9000 games during that time )
  22. For a start you can look at the kits that are sold to replace the electrolytic caps for an AO28 and a 21H amp. Then there is the installation, so it depends on: would the tech have to go to your house to get the amps? (requires desoldering in the case of the AO28). Which then depends on where you live. If there is still a Hammond tech you might give him a call.
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