Cheaper is not cheap, however. Think about how costly the dedicated Hammond repro keyboards are today, and how much it costs to get a really good digital piano. Let's say someone manufactured a digital Mark II. 37-note keyboards that run G-F are not an off-the-shelf item, so that would have to be instrument specific. I'd think that to really have the chance of grabbing the real Mellotron maniacs, the keyboard would have to have a custom designed "feel" to let Mellotronists use the technique they have developed to their advantage, and that would take a fair amount of engineering. Then you have to get all of the Mellotron library loaded, which I'm guessing is going to take a fair amount of ROM. I'm not going to bother with the math, but I'd be curious just how many Meg of memory a Mark II would equate to, not to mention making the entire tape library available - sound effects and rhythmic patterns and all. You'd have to have custom software to interface with the custom controllers (presumably you'd want to capture the design elements and placements of the Mark II panel as closely as feasible) and to take advantage of all of the ROM you have in place, it wouldn't take much more to be able to offer a front panel and sound setup that worked as much as possible like a Mark II but would also be able to play the sounds looped, transposed, filtered, and generally synth controlled if desired, throw in some user RAM, pedals, and a dedicated FX section with some amp-speaker simulators to reproduce the sound of Wharfdales or a Marshall stack or a Fender Twin Reverb, and let's face it, you're starting to come up into the upper end of keyboard prices, and let's face it, there are a lot of people who don't like and never did like Mellotrons (Mr. Emerson?) and would not be part of the demographic - not that I wouldn't love to have such an instrument, and would work it into the ground, but I just can't see a huge market out there. If anybody does make one, please put me on your prospect sheet, I'm probably going to buy one. Jon E Salley MiloJohnson@... M400 #886 > > 2500 Mellotrons sold from the beginning until now? That's not a lot of > > units. It would be difficult to persuade any company that is a good > > idea, because if the real thing didn't sell any better, then why would > > anyone imagine the repro would sell? > > The repro is likely to be a *lot* cheaper for a start. >
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Re: [Mellotronists] a couple of pennies
2002-11-26 by JS
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