Archive of the former Yahoo!Groups mailing list: Mellotronists
Subject: Re: [Mellotronists] choir question
From: kenmerb@...
Date: 2004-07-27
In a message dated 7/27/2004 1:08:25 PM Eastern Daylight Time, jkorb@... writes:
Depends largely on the circuitry. Ken Merbler's MK-II #247
has choir voices, going thru valve-preamps, and Hi-Z heads.
That combination yields that bright "King Crimson" sound.
I have male choir, female choir, boys choir and 8 choir on my MKII, #247. When you crank it up and play through the Wharfedales, it will make the hair stand up on the back of your neck. I rarely get to do that because of where I live, however. The MKII is very bright, almost painful to your ears past a moderate volume level. When I play through headphones at lower volume, it sounds more like my M400.
And Frank Samagaio's Pindertron MK-II #134 , also has
choir voices. But the preamps within have NO equalization
at all. The Moodies' choice back then. The upper registers
are more subdued than an M400,and much less than my
MK-I #124 "Julia."
Definitely a difference here. You can hear a comparison on Ken Leonard's web site when we played Jerry's "Julia" MKII alongside Frank's "Pindertron" MKII. Frank's MKII didn't have the painfully bright (Crimson) sound found in most MKIIs, but it did have a nice Moodies sound, due to the unique preamp in his machine. You can hear the comparisons here, as I captured some of it on a minidisc player I brought along.
http://www.kleonard.com/mellotron/vt0304/pindertron3.htm
The MP3 files are about 3/4 down the page, under the heading "MP3 Audio Samples".
No choirs on Julia, so you can't make the comparison there, but you can hear some on the Pindertron.
This was all done at Jerry's "Mellotron Fantasy Camp" last March in Vermont.
Ken M.