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[hammond_zone] question
If it were 8 DB for the lower, 1 pedel and 9 for the upper in that order, its a M series M ,M2 or M3.
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But you did say 7 for the lower manual. Humm. Not sure. What were the color patterns of the drawbars? Any protruding speaker grill by you knee? If yes 1 or 2 ? ----- Original Message -----
From: Carlo Pietroniro To: Hammond Zone Sent: Sunday, March 03, 2002 11:38 PM Subject: [hammond_zone] question I pose this question to all the Hammond experts, hoping to get an answer. Now please bear with me here........ I played a Hammond spinet today. It had 2 44-note manuals, 12 pedals (not 13), the power toggle switches were located under the keyboards (not in the usual place), and it had a 10th drawbar, next to the 1' pitch. Anyone have any idea what model this was? One more question........ Why is it than on spinet models, the lower manual only has 7 drawbars, and not 9 like the upper manual? They leave out the 2 brown ones, which are the 16' and 5 1/3'. Thanks for any help. carlo Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENT Visit The Hammond Zone To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: hammond_zone-unsubscribe@... Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. |
I have no clue
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----- Original Message -----
From: Carlo Pietroniro To: hammond_zone@... Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 12:03 AM Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question it had 7 drawbars for the lower manual, 1 for the pedal, 9 for the upper, and then one more for the upper. carlo Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENT Visit The Hammond Zone To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: hammond_zone-unsubscribe@... Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. |
Earthlink-fyrefyter
No question about it being one of the "M" series organs, since the start/run
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switches are under the right side of the console AND that it has 12 pedals. Dead giveaway that way. Good organ, if in good shape. Bill Ziegler Datasounds, Inc. Check us on the web at www.datasounds.com Let Us Build and Host Your Website ----- Original Message -----
From: "Carlo Pietroniro" <organist@...> To: <hammond_zone@...> Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 12:11 AM Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question well, it was definitely a Hammond. it had the name written on the barbetween the upper and lower manuals, and I had to hold the start switch for a few seconds, then hit the run switch. It only had 12 pedals, and that threw me off.
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Ron Bell
The M, M-2 and M-3 were the first spinets made, why they had 12 pedals I
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don't know but they added the high C to all the later spinets.. These organs had the start run swiches under the console and 12 pedals, but they had eight lower drawbars, one pedal drawbar and nine upper drawbars. The only tonewheel spinets with the start run switches I have ever heard of(and I am almost certain that I know of them all) are M, M-2 ,M-3 and the M-100 series (the M-100's have the swiches in the normal spot).You have found an odd organ indeed, if you have a chance to see it again double check the number of drawbars and look at the name plate on the back. Did the organ look like this one? Cheers, Ronnie. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Carlo Pietroniro" < Thanks Bill! By the way, why only 12 pedals? Why not add the C like allother spinets? Also, what's that other drawbar? What's the pitch? Is it a mixture, or the 8/9 harmonic?
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Chris Clifton
Decoration? I've never seen anyone actually use it! Same for the extra
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drawbars on the H-series. Chris Clifton There is a theory which states that if anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. Douglas Adams ----- Original Message -----
From: "Carlo Pietroniro" <organist@...> To: <hammond_zone@...> Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 7:53 AM Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question YES!!! That's it!!! That's the organ I played today..............extra lower drawbar for?
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Ron Bell
The extra lower drawbar is the highest black drawbar with a dot on it, it
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is a mixture of two tones(i think the tonic and a third above but I could be wrong.) All of the M seiries have this feature, the L-100's do not. Ron. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Carlo Pietroniro" <organist@...> To: <hammond_zone@...> Sent: Sunday, March 03, 2002 11:53 PM Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question YES!!! That's it!!! That's the organ I played today..............extra lower drawbar for?
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Ron Bell
I am far from an orginist(jazz and rock organ players are not organists
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right ;) but when I feel like playing a little "Hockey Music" on my X-77 the extra drawbars add quite a bit to the over all sound. "Cheesy" organ music is not my thing but I hear Klaus Wunderlich uses the extra drawbars when he rips it up!! Cheers, Ronnie. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Clifton" Decoration? I've never seen anyone actually use it! Same for the extra |
Ron Bell
Hi Jeff,
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I used to go to Maple Leaf gardens in Toronto when I was younger(not that long ago as I am 26) They always had organ music during the game. They have it at most Baseball parks too, I don't know the proper name for this kind of music so I called hockey music;) Da na na na na na, CHARGE!!!! Lets Go Zoners Lets GO!!! Ronnie. ----- Original Message -----
From: <jlc7184@...> To: <hammond_zone@...> Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 1:56 PM Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question Hi Ron, |
daz
The reason that the very early M's only had 12 pedals is because Hammond
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decided that they needed a smaller home organ for sale to the general public. So the engineers were asked to produce a spinet model with ONE octave of pedals and 44 note offset manuals... the engineers, not being musicians decided in their infinite wisdom to only give EXACTLY one octave... 12 notes C-B! Hence the birth of the rather strange bass unit! Some people find it impossible to play them and keep stamping on the floor. The reason that the 16' and 5 1/3' are not added to the lower manuals of the spinets is because you would theoretically only have a very small useable part of the manual while they were being registrated. Single notes would sound OK, but chords would sound terrible... try it, play some chords in the lowest octave of the upper manual with the 16' and 5 1/3' mixed in. That will show you the result, AARRGGHH!! Muddy as the depths of hell! Also it did save them money I suppose! They would be of no value unless playing bass lines, but then they would fold back anyway, so what would be the point. I remember someone asking a while ago about the X5 registration on the demo track (on a website).. it is the Tibias preset - Leslie fast/slow to suit, no vibrato, foot to the floor, screaming away, ears bleeding! End of story time. Daz -----Original Message-----
From: Ron Bell [mailto:worthogis@...] Sent: 04 March 2002 07:47 To: hammond_zone@... Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question The M, M-2 and M-3 were the first spinets made, why they had 12 pedals I don't know but they added the high C to all the later spinets.. These organs had the start run swiches under the console and 12 pedals, but they had eight lower drawbars, one pedal drawbar and nine upper drawbars. The only tonewheel spinets with the start run switches I have ever heard of(and I am almost certain that I know of them all) are M, M-2 ,M-3 and the M-100 series (the M-100's have the swiches in the normal spot).You have found an odd organ indeed, if you have a chance to see it again double check the number of drawbars and look at the name plate on the back. Did the organ look like this one? Cheers, Ronnie. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carlo Pietroniro" < Thanks Bill! By the way, why only 12 pedals? Why not add the C like allother spinets? Also, what's that other drawbar? What's the pitch? Is it a mixture, or the 8/9 harmonic?
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daz
Yes, Klaus USED to do this... he died a while ago. Brilliant organist, but
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not a very nice man. I watched him on many occasions ignore children who wanted his autograph, saying to a friend of mine "I am not at work, I have finished my concert... I now go to my hotel, please leave and bother someone else" So I shouted after him, "when do you plan to perform a LIVE concert Klaus? Instead of playing over multitracking and cheating the public. This society has just paid ???2000 to listen to a CD" He returned a mouth full of abuse which I cannot write here because it would look like this **!"???$%%^&*&* I think you get the massage... As the Swedish prime minister once said!! LOL! The Wersi organ had quite a good electronic tremolo, called Wersi voice... very effective. I was offered a Wersi Galaxy last week for ???100... left it alone cause they can be big trouble, if you think the RT's and Model E's are big... they are bugger all to a Galaxy. Daz -----Original Message-----
From: Ron Bell [mailto:worthogis@...] Sent: 04 March 2002 08:36 To: hammond_zone@... Subject: Re: [hammond_zone] question I am far from an orginist(jazz and rock organ players are not organists right ;) but when I feel like playing a little "Hockey Music" on my X-77 the extra drawbars add quite a bit to the over all sound. "Cheesy" organ music is not my thing but I hear Klaus Wunderlich uses the extra drawbars when he rips it up!! Cheers, Ronnie. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Chris Clifton" Decoration? I've never seen anyone actually use it! Same for the extra Visit The Hammond Zone To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: hammond_zone-unsubscribe@... Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to |
Jeff,
The Hockey m,usic we refer to would be something bery similar to this. A very, very brassy sounding organ with great depth of the vibrato and tremolo. Don't know how old you are, but think back to the days of General Hospital. Lets say through the sixties. The background music was a Hammond in the studios. It';s sound was very brassy and had a severe depth in vibrato as well as tremolo. The depth of these modulations was so great at one time it would'nt even sound like an A minor chord. Just pulsating white noise. But when the soap got to a romantic part, no distortion and a simple full organ sound that seemed to rise in volume as the soap neared the end. At the very end , the chord would be held and the organist would quickly lower the volume on the expression pedal and then once more at the cresendo bring it quickly back up to full volume , almost to distortion, and at the same time with the left hand , bring the 4', 2', 1', 1/2 drawbars all the way out. Such, I always thought they were trying to imitate a theatre organ on a Hammond. Lets not forget the game show background music about that time frame as well. Let's make a deal show included that brassy sound, with a player with some darn fast footwork on the bass pedals. Ok, someone help me out on this one. Who were those keyboardists? Dang good job, I thought. Jimmy |
Thanks, Daz.
I was always wondering who these guys were. In my church, we had a couple female organists that would litterally "stomp" on that gas pedal and create such distortion you couldn't hear the actual tune. All you would hear was the rumbling bass and maybe some flutes. I was always the opposite. I like that brassy sound, not too much, but just enough, just enough , for the city. Jimmy |
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