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Hound Dog (Live) Todd, HDA, j, Paulo, doc, Ocala, r4m

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Offline j

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thank you, Rog :).. using my ole trusty M1 as a controller.. very light action, makes it much easier. It would take years of practice on a piano all over again to be able to pull that sort of thing off !

who's got time for that, these days :)
wazzzzzaaaap


Offline McLovin

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I agree with Roger,.. that solo kills man.
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Offline j

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Offline Paulo

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thank you, Rog :).. using my ole trusty M1 as a controller..

Great Synth... Got a rack of that one... It's one of the best synths ever.. Even these days some of my tracks uses it's presets. As a matter of fact there's only 2 hardware units that from time to time I use as sound source, The M1 and an Yamaha TG 77... They rock

As for playing, I use a 1987 Yamaha DX11 as the controler, I bought it brand new, very reliable, it works just like when it was new. Amazing the prices of those things at that time, today things are much more cheaper. It costed me in 1987 what we call now 1000 Euros, a fortune, I tell ya.

J... I don't like playing piano with synths, I don't feel the weight of the keys, it's a matter of getting used to it I think but I don't like it... Fortunately I got a Roland Piano with real piano keys. I use it very rarely but if a piano track shows up, that is what I connect to my DAW. Stil I think you're right, it's a matter of getting used to the keyboard.
Live the best you can 'cause you're gonna be dead for a long time.
Respect
Paulo Gomes


Offline McLovin

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Guess we are gonna turn this into a keyboard player forum!! >:D

Dx11,..(wow, I haven't heard that since high school).  The yamaha's have been and remain very solid axes.  I was never a fan of the M1 patches (though I know a lot of people still have them so,... they must be a solid board)

This is how it worked for me:

My first synth was a Korg Poly800, which I thought was cool because you could strap it on like a guitar!! ;D.  It also had a joystick like an Atari Game Controller (again a good selling point for a kid in a candy store). It actually was a pretty neat synth for the price.  It also took batteries so there was less to no chords attached to ya when you were cheesing up the stage with 80's synth poses. ;D ;D  Used it live for about 2 years and then it was stolen at a gig.  In those days,.. piano sounds were still brutal to achieve accurately with a synth so my bottom tier was a cheap Casio 61 key piano (which for the life of me I can't remember the model).  At the time,.. for the price,.. it pulled off a pretty decent piano sound.  I always have and still gig with bottom tier piano and top tier synth.  Sold the piano to a music store at some point (can't remember).

I used to rent Yamaha DX7's on long term rentals (after the poly was stolen). This is a classic but could never afford to buy one.

Then Kawai introduced the K4 and the price was right so this became my top tier synth for about 2 years.  It was a great board but fell in love with the Roland D50 early on in the game and when the price was right I traded the K4 in for the D50.  Had the D50 for hmm a lot of years actually,.. solid board,.. great patches and expandable.  The keybed failed occationally but I was getting pretty good at ripping it apart and getting the keypad sensors working again (in between sets).

I finally could afford a decent piano and purchased the Roland RD500.  This thing rocked and was one of the first simulated hammer action piano/keyboards out there but it was heavy (especially in the homemade wood roadcase I built for it).  I also was a pretty aggresive player at the time so it was not unusual for me to bust the hammers during a set,.. rip the board apart on break,.. crazy glue the hammers back together again,..and screw it all back together just in time for the next set.  (I was on the road with GERK at the time and I know he remembers this ritual well) ;D

The RD500 and the D50 was a great live combo.  The only thing that was missing was a solid B3 sound.  At the time Hammond had introduced the XB2 and XB3 (which were pretty good sounding) but pretty expensive.

After I felt like I couldn't possibly add more glue to the hammers of my RD500 I decided to sell it off.  Kicked the shit out of it and still got $850.00 for it. ;)

All in one synth/pianos where starting to come out and what I felt (for the price) was the best one of them all was the Alesis QS series.  This thing has great piano, synth, string and organ sounds.  It also came out in 61/76/88 key and module versions.  I purchased the Alesis QS7 (76 key model).

All I needed was my dream B3 patches.  Roland had been in the B3 simulation game for a few years now (I.E. VK7) and had just released its newest model the VK8.  I figured the best option for me would be the module (as I already had a cheap controller I could use).  I have attached a picture of the QS7 and VK8m rig (with a cheap top tier Yamaha controller) Don't mind the wife beater,.. it was hot outside man!! >:D

I later purchased a Korg TR76 for my lower Tier and moved the QS to the top tier.  There wasn't much I couldn't do with that rig.

I don't gig live much anymore so sold the TR76 and purchased a Yamaha NP30 Piano for practice and small live gigs. The NP is super cheap, 76 key semiweighted and in my opinion has a killer Piano sound for the price. Any of my most recent posts have been using the NP and I have had great comments about the sound.

Sorry Bill. ;D
« Last Edit: October 12, 2009, 10:49:38 AM by HDA »
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Offline j

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I love where this thread has travelled :) :)

I thought of buying the M1R (the M3 rack module) when I bought the M1, just to have 512 sounds and combos available for multitracking. I did a lot of studio recording with that, along with the P3 (standalone piano module), the Roland U220, Juno 106 and my moogs. During that time I was buying fixing and selling a lot of gear - had a Rhodes stage Mark II, Korg Dw8000, Dss-1, Sequential Prophet 600, Akai S612 sampler, an E-mu Drumulator, a Yamaha C3.. Thomas L1.. assorted stomp boxes and external fx. Back then I was sequencing on an Atari ST and recording onto a Fostex 4 track. My live rig (late 80's) was the Juno 106, Dss-1 and C3.. I loved that DSS-1 and would like to own one again someday... although I love the compactness of my current setup, I'd need to invest in something much more recent for live gigs.. those days may be all but past for me though :)

wazzzzzaaaap


Offline Paulo

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Eh Eh.... Roland Juno 106... only 4 notes polyphony as far as I remember. Had one of those back in 1981 or something... Cool pads and a great chorus effect.
As for Kaway, I also had the K4, LOL...

Back in the nineties I was playing top notch stuff. Kurzweill 2500, Yamaha 2000 Sampler, Roland S Sampler... Preety cool stuff at that time.

HDA, the keyboard on my Avatar is the DX11

Sorry Bill, gonna shut up now not to disturb your post  ;)
Live the best you can 'cause you're gonna be dead for a long time.
Respect
Paulo Gomes


Offline j

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six note polyphony.. I think it was the first programmable analog polysynth with MIDI. I had a memorymoog that came out a year or two earlier, but it had to be retrofitted for midi. I loved the joystick on the Roland, with the ability to pitchbend and add LFO modulation at the same time.. made for a very expressive board, especially when emulating electric guitar.. I spent a lot of time on that :)

Bill?   :)  :)  :)

Eh Eh.... Roland Juno 106... only 4 notes polyphony as far as I remember.
wazzzzzaaaap


Offline McLovin

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The poly800 had I believe 8notes of polyphony.  I probably didn't deserve more than that anyhow! ;D

This will teach Bill to have 3 keyboardists on a song. >:D  SUCKER!! >:D ^-^
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Offline r4m

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Gotta let the riff raff hang out somewhere to keep em out of trouble! ;D


Offline r4m

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Didn't know Todd had this posted at the other place. I posted too!! ;D
Todd's is at #6!!! YeeeeeeHaaaaaw! >:D


Offline docmidnite

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The poly800 had I believe 8notes of polyphony.  I probably didn't deserve more than that anyhow! ;D

This will teach Bill to have 3 keyboardists on a song. >:D  SUCKER!! >:D ^-^


Offline OcalaMusician

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Doc - ya gotta be specific - LEAD Guitar Players and Lead Singers get the chics.  All the rhythm guys get are the....Um...well, I'll just stop myself right there.  This is a public place.   :o
Neal - The Multi-Instrumentalist & Mix Engineer.


Offline Paulo

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Damn Guitar Players  >:(

Doc - ya gotta be specific - ... and Lead Singers get the chics. 

Damn Singers  :-X
Live the best you can 'cause you're gonna be dead for a long time.
Respect
Paulo Gomes


Offline r4m

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The poly800 had I believe 8notes of polyphony.  I probably didn't deserve more than that anyhow! ;D

This will teach Bill to have 3 keyboardists on a song. >:D  SUCKER!! >:D ^-^

 >:D >:D >:D >:D


 

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