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Russell Gorton wrote: >Latest Echoplex victim: my buddy Dan's Fender Rhodes Model Seventy-Three >stage piano. > >When I picked it up to loan...Dan is a ReallyNiceGuy(tm)... I didn't >realize >that these old things were totally passive electronics. Duh. I was >looking for >the power cord for, like, 3 whole minutes before I took the top off and >examined >the innards. No power supply. "Must work like one of them eee-lectric >guitars >all these kids are playing nowadays..." Amazing, isnt it? I had one of those. It still lives with a friend in switzerland, probably not played. I remember we used to push the midrange, probably around 2 kHz to bring out the nice attack. During the whole 70ies, there was no real alternative to the Rhodes: The Hohner pianet with flat tongues and capacitive pick up was ridiculous. The Hohner clavinet was great, with real cords, but no bass, little sustain - marked the beginning of the funk aera. And then there was the piano that Supertramp created their success with (Hohner, too?), a rather childish sound, for my taste. Around '78, the Electric Grands came, heavy and expensive, and still just one cord per note and not very realistic sound. I think there was a Yamaha and a Kawai. They soon became outdated by the polyphonic synths. Only problem with Rhodes: The tone "wires" break if you attack to hard, and they might be hard to replace, now. >Looping several different short 8-10 second chord changes; think "Kind of >Blue" >riff or something... then use NextLoop w/SwitchQuant=On to walk through >them. >Then, play various inversions and diminished variations of same over the >loops...solo notes wash over the transitions between loops. Overdub when >the >urge strikes! > >As with other things I loop ('cello, analog synth), I'm getting about an >85% >success rate with noiseless startpoints. What seems to help is selecting >a >dominant note that is slowly decaying over each startpoint, trying not to >attack >that note too near the startpoint. Each small loop is overdubbed once to >wash >over the startpoint with that same note (end Record with Overdub, or end >Record >with Insert in Rehearse mode until I get it near how I want it...) Get >the >startpoints of all the small loops within a range of similarity and it is >surprisingly easy to step through the loops without any abrupt >changeovers. >Loving that Echoplex...what a box! Thank you. Great to hear from somebody that seems to *understand* the box! >The overtones and room resonance are mind-blowing. Absolutely gorgeous! >The >"tines" (is this what they're called?--the little tuning-fork metal bar >guys >that vibrate on the Rhodes' sounding board) set up washes of >eardrum-buzzing, >underwater-landscape-on-quaaludes-with-Milt-Jackson-on-vibes that put >everyone >(even the dog) into trance mode. > >The interaction between the instrument's sounding board (sustain pads >raised) >and the amplified looped versions is phenomenal. A great instrument for >looping! This I did not understand: Did you get some kind of feedback from the loop into the instrument? So the notes would resonate with the look like a sympathy cord? Great post! Matthias