M-trons, pindertrons and that other one. A bit lengthy...sorry...
2004-11-26 by Mattias
Hey hey,
Had the weird experience to record percussion on a
recording of ALWs Jesus Christ superstar that a friend of mine is doing and
they had almost entirely used Mellotron and Chamberlin sounds for Strings, Oboes
some voices but it really sounded flat and weird. Still had that weird ambience
to it but didn´t have the right Kapaooww feeling. I think for
instance the sampled Chamberlin stuff sounds great due to Harry Chamberlins
great recordings of the instruments but when they are so clean and Hifi they
just turn into weird Cellos sounds with the vibrato in the wrong places.
Couldn´t help putting on some Fiona Apple when I got back home just to check
that I wasn't all wrong and all of a sudden all the spinetingling came back.
I think the most important thing is when
you use Mellotron samples is to get some of the original grittiness in
there...pull it through an amp and mike it so it has some sonic framing to it. I
do that a lot with my 400 pulling it through a Guitar amp with just a bit of
Spring (no...not the band) reverb and it just sounds...right at least to my
ears. If you doubletrack it ( if it is strings for instance) and pan
hard lef/right and then add root notes on the Cello....you are
home.
Slight sidestep...I once used a Optigan drum loop
on a pop track and when I showed up at the studio the next day...the
exhausted engineer proclaimed proudly that he had spent the previous
night cleaning up the loop getting all the scatchiness and clicks and
cracks out...A difficult discussion followed.
I don´t want to be lengthy about this but another
thing is...If you are using samples. One should try to play the sample in a
original-sound manner. If you listen to the big Mellotron players it
sounds great because they are adapting the playing to the instrument. Some notes
are out of tune...so don´t play em et.c et.c Big massive chords didn´t always
work out so you break it down into parts. John Paul Jones talked about
approaching recording Mellotron parts as in viewing it as a String section.
Everyone plays more or less one note interacting with the others creating chords
and melodies.
What I am trying to get at is I think the samples
are pretty decent. But the Mellotron isn´t a perfect instrument. If you play
incredibly fast runs on a sample of the 3 violins it won´t sound like Tony
Banks, King Crimson or Rick Wakeman. And it won´t have anything to do
with the sample.
An interesting thing is also the fact that all of a
sudden there must thousands upon thousands of people with samples of the
weirdest Mellotron sounds available and I have so far (to my knowledge)
never heard anyone use any of the Mark II organs or the electric guitar. It is
still the same old strings and choirs... Seems like a terrible waste of
opportunities.
Best regards,