There are a few synths (loosely used term) such as Yamaha that are pianos at heart but electronic synths with actual key movement. I have a ton of old brochures of the models I am talking about but that will take time to dig up. They did build them. They use the mechanical key moment. Not all because of the cost. I have a Hammond M. I need to find some parts for it as one of the brass air condensers split. Then there is the tubes in it's amp that need a touch up as it has a bit of crackle after a while. I also have a Leslie 147. dale dale Dale Kay Administrator Kay-Net.com Lancaster CA Bus 661.723.0266 admin@... Slave to synth and Avid reader of Signature Riffs of the Pros join here at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/signature_riffs_of_the_pros/join ----- Original Message ----- From: spaceanimals To: AN1x-list@yahoogroups.com Sent: Wednesday, November 05, 2003 6:22 PM Subject: [AN1x] poly after touch and synths in general I love synthesizers and electronic music because I get to build instruments by designing patches and I have access to lots of sounds. But synths, even with all the bells and whistles, poly after touch, ribbon controller, extensive modulation capabilities etc. don't have the feel and expression found in actual mechanical keyboards. Take the AN1X. Nice and light, portable. For gigs this is great. For serious rock playing, an old upright is much better.You can really pound the piano and it doesn't move. Wooden keys! Then you have all the chaos generated by all those strings and all that wood, plus the touch isn't limited to 128 MIDI steps. Look at all the cool stuff going on inside a Hammond organ. Again you've got the weight, the hot old wire smell, all the chaos theory in tubes, vibrato chrous, real cool drawbars, spinning speakers. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [AN1x] poly after touch and synths in general
2003-11-06 by Administrator (Dale Kay)
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