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Conference napalm::commusic_v1

Title:* * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * *
Notice:Conference has been write-locked. Use new version.
Moderator:DYPSS1::SCHAFER
Created:Thu Feb 20 1986
Last Modified:Mon Aug 29 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2852
Total number of notes:33157

2466.0. "Won't Get Fooled Again" by WEFXEM::COTE (Light, sweet, crude...) Fri Oct 05 1990 12:23

    OK, how'd did they do the beginning to that song?
    
    I've been trying to do it by (among other things) using a square
    wave LFO to modulate amplitude. I also hear a sloooooow filter
    sweep...
    
    What was used to do that sound?
    
    ...anyone know how to play it?
    
    Edd
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2466.1Moi AussiRANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERTTom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid!Fri Oct 05 1990 13:4211
  You know I've been wondering that same damn thing for quite some time now!
  If memory serves, during the Who's last tour they didn't play that part
  live, they played a pre-recorded version off tape!  Even though they had
  a multitude of keyboard/keyboard players doing keys for all their other
  songs.  Is there something about that sound that is so tricky they could 
  only duplicate it in the studio??

-Tom_who_is_also_dying_to_know!

  
2466.2The hypnotized never lie...WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Fri Oct 05 1990 13:499
    Yeah, I taped the "Tommy" broadcast in the hopes that maybe I'd get
    a peak at what the keyboard players were doing during WGFA.
    
    The square wave LFO seems to be at least one component. If nothing
    else it makes the part easier to play!
    
    BTW- What album is it on? I don't seem to have it!
    
    Edd
2466.3"Who's Next?" I think...AISG::MISKINISFri Oct 05 1990 14:298
    As far as I remember, It's on "Who's Next?"...
    
    I can play it perfectly...  I simply pop the album on my turntable,
    and...
    
    :-)
    
    _John_
2466.4Analog Sampler Method?WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Fri Oct 05 1990 14:385
    Could ya teach me?
    
    ;^)
    
    Edd
2466.5wow. You need the patch chart. NBD.LEDDEV::ROSSshiver me timbres....Fri Oct 05 1990 15:1013
    
    Wow. Amazing. Technology passe!
    
    Thats a simple effect with an ARP 2500, or 2600...(or...analog
    whatever synth).....
    
    Its strange that it was like 'no big deal' when it came out...
    and now nnn years later, it's stumping the stars.....
    
    Edd, call me, I *must* be thinking about the 'wrong' song....
    
    ron
    
2466.6Get That Radio Shack Moog Fired Up....AQUA::ROSTShe moves me, manFri Oct 05 1990 15:3127
    
    Ah, Edd, welcome to the analog world.
    
    The original track was done on an old ARP, probably a 2600.  I think
    it's a S/H trick, as I can get a similar thing happening on my Odyssey.
    Here's how:
    
    1. I use noise as the sample and hold source
    
    2. I modulate the filter with the S/H, thus getting random sweeps.
    
    3. I set the amplitude envelope generator for "repeat" mode, where it
    gets triggered by the LFO.
    
    4. I set the LFO frequency to get the notes "pulsing" at the right
    tempo.
    
    Unfortunately, digital synths don't have S/H.  Dave Blickstein gave me
    an ESQ-1 patch that is a decent imitation of this sound, it takes
    advantage of an ESQ mode where the LFOs run freely instead of
    restarting with every note on.  Then, using the LFO to mod the filter,
    you get "random" filter sweeping if the LFO frequency is low enough.  I
    don;t know if other synths allow you to do this type of thing, though.
    
    
    							Brian
    
2466.7Reminds me of the "keywork" on _Brain Salad Surgery_+CTHULU::YERAZUNISI am the one you warned me of...Fri Oct 05 1990 15:369
    It's only stumping the stars because the stars are used to thinking in
    terms of 16-bit multilooping samplers that don't "do routing".
    
    It's an easy sound to program up on any matrix-mod synth; for that
    matter, it should be easy on any ESQ as well.
    
    Can the VFX do that sound?
    
    	-Bill
2466.8ARP 2600 is the key to that sound.PROSE::DIORIOKazoos--the great equalizersFri Oct 05 1990 15:3713
I believe they fed a Hammond organ through an ARP 2600, using the 2600's 
filters (modulated by a sawtooth wave?) to process it.

I played that tune in a band about 10 years ago. I picked the whole thing 
off the record and wrote it down. I think I still have it somewhere. I'll 
see if I can dig it out for you if you want. In a club situation, that break 
in the middle (over 1 minute I think) of just the keyboard part was just on 
the verge of being too long for the audience. Or maybe that was just my 
perception of it while I was playing it. Dunno. But it worked, even though 
I was never satisfied with my simulation of the sound using an organ fed 
through an Electro Harmonix Small Stone phase shifter (remember those ?).

Mike D
2466.9probably a polymoog or that ilkDYPSS1::SCHAFERI used to wear a big man's hat...Fri Oct 05 1990 15:5320
    It seems that I invariably run across this effect every time I sit down
    for an extended period of time to program from scratch.  Kinda like
    sitting down with a piece of clay to turn out a marvelous work of art
    and ending up with another ashtray ... (sigh)
    
    I think the patch can be duplicated using a single LFO to *sawtooth*
    modulate the amplitude envelope, and either:
    
    	o  use a 2nd LFO to s/h modulate the filter, or
    	o  use a 2nd envelope to modulate the filter
    
    It's a very easy patch to write on an OB-Xa.  It's also *very* hard to
    use live, since the LFO speed and the tempo are tightly coupled (which
    is probably why it wasn't done live).
    
    If the original was done using a 2500/2600/Odyssey, I'd like to know
    how (chords on single/dual oscillator machines?!).  I can't believe
    they used overdubs.
    
+b
2466.10How DO You Do It On A TX81Z, Anyway?AQUA::ROSTShe moves me, manFri Oct 05 1990 16:018
    Re: .9
    
    "Who's Next" came out in 70 or 71, about five years before the
    Polymoog....
    
    Uh-oh, rathole ahead...
    
    							Brian
2466.11Something different for once.RANGER::EIRIKUREir�kur Hallgr�mssonFri Oct 05 1990 16:044
    But it's such a *nice* rathole!
    
    	Eirikur
    
2466.12WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Fri Oct 05 1990 16:0524
    > very hard to use live...
    
    T'was quite the bitch to even sync the HR-16 up! I imagine it would be
    easier to hit the tempo with a brained drummer (oxymoron?), but more
    likely to drift during the tune....
    
    > I wrote it down...
    
    Oh, yes please! I made great progress last night trying to pick it off
    the cassette copy of the audio from the video, but an x-script would
    save me mondo time...
    
    > Edd, call me...
    
    Hello, is Ron home? Can his 2600 come out to play?
    
    > sawtooth modulate the amplitude...
    
    I tried that, but the LFO envelope wasn't right then. If I could tweak
    the LFO 'shape' I think it would be better, but alas...
    
    All this madness is a direct result of Karl's digital delay note.
    
    Edd
2466.13KEYS::MOELLERDEC-rewarding successful risk takersFri Oct 05 1990 16:083
    The Kawai K3 had a NICE sample-and-hold patch.
    
    karl
2466.14DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVIDThe sea refuses no river....Fri Oct 05 1990 17:194
When I saw the Who in '76 Pete reached behind his stack to some keys and 
suddenly there  was the synth intro...

dbii
2466.15We all got fooled again...WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Fri Oct 05 1990 17:334
    Why do I get the impression that the intro was performed only once,
    and we've been hearing *that* take ever since?
    
    Edd
2466.16They use tapes.PROSE::DIORIOKazoos--the great equalizersFri Oct 05 1990 17:528
>    Why do I get the impression that the intro was performed only once,
>    and we've been hearing *that* take ever since?

Because they've been using tapes of the original studio take in all their 
live shows since it first came out. 

Mike D.
2466.17me too, me too!RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERTTom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid!Fri Oct 05 1990 20:229
  Hmmm, so I was right about the tapes.  Makes sense why it was so hard to
  do live too.  Sounds like an interesting challenge.  Speaking of which,
  Mike, if you find your transcription for Edd, I'd mucho appreciate a copy
  as well if you don't mind.  Please drop it off to Tom Robert LJO2/D10.

  Thanks!

-Tom
2466.18errataDYPSS1::SCHAFERI used to wear a big man's hat...Mon Oct 08 1990 11:0216
RE: .8-.10 (Mike, Brian, etc)
    
    Hmm - Mike wrote .8 while I was writing .9, and I missed it.
    
    Not knowing much about that generation of Who music (I was only in 7th
    grade if the album really was released in '71), I was only speculating
    about the polymoog/etc.  The Hammond thru an Arp (as Mike wrote) is
    likely the way they did it.  No way to achieve that polyphony
    otherwise.
    
    To wax Janzenian, I used to do this with my ARP Odyssey and Axxe (when
    I was 7, no less),  in that I used to feed an audio out into their
    audio ins and twiddle with the filter.  It was always so grungy,
    though, that I never considered using it to record.
    
+b (who sometimes regrets selling his ARPs)
2466.19THE answer.LEDDEV::ROSSshiver me timbres....Tue Oct 09 1990 12:3120
    
    You guys are close.
    
    The LFO is just a slow oscillator that creates the 'beat'.
    It triggers the Env. Gen. that gates the VCA.
    The filter is swept separately...heck, he might even have
    done it with his left hand, while playing the 'chords' 
    with his right....or he used heavily filtered Sample and hold
    random output (creates slowly changing changes).
    
    As for polyphony. Sorry, no hammond necessary. The 2600
    has 3 oscillators. The keyboard played 2 notes. As I recall,
    the 'tune' has only 2 changing notes...ANYWAY.
    
    So it COULD be played live with a 2600....or a 2500.
    
    I'd like to hear the tune again. Edd, bring to bim?
    
    ron
    
2466.20DOPEY::DICKENSWhat are you pretending not to know ?Tue Oct 09 1990 13:117
I once saw the band "4 in legion" do an excellent cover of that tune.

Funny thing was, they had *no* keyboards whatsoever.  The (rather amazing)
guitarist produced the sound by turning his guitar *way* up until it was feeding
back through the monitor, and then played the chords and "chopped" them up by
pushing down on the pickup selector switch, which apparently had it's detents
removed.  You had to hear it to believe it...
2466.21Tap the speaker wires on the amp terminal!LEDDEV::ROSSshiver me timbres....Tue Oct 09 1990 13:567
    
    ....analog implimentation #2, eh?
    
    nice. Yeah, I can imagine it.
    
    rr
    
2466.22Just play it.SALEM::DACUNHAWed Oct 10 1990 09:3013
    
    
    
    
        A few years back, I saw a tape of the band playing the song.  
    
        And they had a real live keyboard player playing the part!!!
    
    
        It sounded great and almost identical to the recording.
    
    
        Don't make it more complicated than it is.
2466.23Trust me on this.PROSE::DIORIOKazoos--the great equalizersWed Oct 10 1990 12:1823
>          <<< Note 2466.19 by LEDDEV::ROSS "shiver me timbres...." >>>
>                                -< THE answer. >-
        
>    As for polyphony. Sorry, no hammond necessary. The 2600
>    has 3 oscillators. 

Yes, the 2600 has 3 oscillators, but you can't use them to produce 
polyphony in the traditional sense. As with many other analog beasts of the 
time, you could tune them all together to get a FAT sound, tune them to a 
triad and play "one note chords", etc. But as far as true 3 note polyphony,
sorry, no can do on a 2600.

>The keyboard played 2 notes. As I recall,
>    the 'tune' has only 2 changing notes...ANYWAY.

I feel qualified to rebut this because I transcribed it. There is 
4 note polyphony through most of it, and 5 in some places.
    
>    So it COULD be played live with a 2600....or a 2500.

Yes, if you fed a Hammond organ through it.

Mike D
2466.24WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Wed Oct 10 1990 12:415
    I've no idea how close I may be to getting the notes right (my taped
    copy psuques audio-wise), but A (spelled A-C#-E)over E bass sound 
    good to start it off...
    
    Edd
2466.25Give me your mailstop, Edd.PROSE::DIORIOKazoos--the great equalizersWed Oct 10 1990 13:029
Edd, I found one page of my transcription of it. It's the long keyboard
break in the middle of the tune. I'll send it to you, and to Tom Robert too 
(you there Tom?). I don't have the intro part, probably because I memorized 
that part and didn't use the music for it (never memorized the other 
part--just read it onstage), but I can throw that together for you, and 
send that as well. One thing I can tell you off the top of my head is that it 
starts with open fifths (A and E only), no third (C#).

Mike D
2466.26Pete Townsend's 2500PAULJ::HARRIMANAccidental TaboulehWed Oct 10 1990 13:5012

	I used to have an old ARP 2500 manual - on the back were testimonials
	from notables of the day. Roger Powell and Pete Townsend were among
	the testimonials. 

	Pete Townsend's 2500 was able to play six notes simultaneously. It
	had two keyboard manuals, each able to output three control voltages.
	Among other things it could do. He was into sequencing a lot as well,
	and had the ARP 10x3 analog sequencer in his 2500 setup.

	/pjh
2466.27Mystery Polyphonic Mode of the ARP Odyssey (Rathole)AQUA::ROSTShe moves me, manWed Oct 10 1990 14:3216
    
    ARP's concept of "polyphony" was kind of weird.  On the Odyssey, you get
    two oscillators which may be detuned and mixed in the usual sense for
    mono playing.  However, if you hold two notes down, one gets just
    oscillator #1 and the other just #2.  So if #2 is detuned more than a 
    few cents, and has a different waveform or is being modulated
    differently than #1, it sounds extremely weird.  On the other hand, if
    you set up the two oscillators exactly the same, you can play two notes
    at once, albeit with single-oscillator sound.  This is something you
    couldn't do on a MiniMoog.
    
    I imagine machines like the 2600 and 2500, since they could be patched,
    would allow somewhat more flexible polyphonic operation if you could
    generate the control voltages.
    
    							Brian
2466.28Hey, how bout a VOX! They were big.LEDDEV::ROSSshiver me timbres....Thu Oct 11 1990 14:5021
    
    Getting tired of this like me?
    
    I worked at ARP. I have a 2600. Mike, please, no tutorials on 
    polyphony and how it can or cant be generated.
    
    If you say 4 parts...ie 4 NOTES are actually changing. No drones...
    then I bow to your transcription virtuosity. 
    
    At least until I hear it again.
    
    Gee, it MUST be a hammond. Couldnt have been a Lowrey.
    
    You win. 
    
    So Edd, ya get a hammond and ya bring it over, and....
    
    ;}
    
    rr
    
2466.29Let's just drop it. PROSE::DIORIOKazoos--the great equalizersThu Oct 11 1990 17:2717
        
Ron,

     I certainly didn't get the impression that this was a contest of some 
sort to be won or lost. I'm sorry if my comments came across as adversarial
in nature. They were never intended that way. Should have used my smileys I 
guess. Nor was I trying to give a tutorial on polyphony (ARP's or anyone 
else's). God knows how many ratholes there are on that subject already in this 
conference :-). I was just offering an opinion based on my own experience 
with the 2600 (I bow to your superior knowledge). It just sounds like a 
Hammond organ going through a 2600 *to me*, however I certainly wouldn't say 
that is THE answer.

I'm really sick of this too.

Mike D.

2466.30DREGS::BLICKSTEINThis is your brain on UnixFri Oct 12 1990 10:284
    Could someone please explain to me what is meant by "running a Hammond
    through a 2600"?
    
    	db
2466.31pretty normalRANGER::EIRIKUREir�kur Hallgr�mssonFri Oct 12 1990 10:417
    Nothing too dramatic is meant by that.  Just running the audio signal
    through the filter (and maybe the VCA) and using some modulation
    sources to sweep the filter cutoff.  Any modular system is by nature
    open to this sort of thing.  You can use anything you happen to have on
    hand as a module.
    
    	Eirikur
2466.32RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERTTom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid!Fri Oct 12 1990 11:085
  Yes Mike, I'm still here.  Would still appreciate any part that you have.
  Thanks.

-TR
2466.33AISG::WARNERIt&#039;s only work if they make you do itFri Oct 12 1990 11:2715
    There was a lot of fancy external signal processing available
    on the 2600 (I sold mine for a song when everybody wanted to
    play more than two notes at a time, and I was using it in a
    recording studio).
    
    One patch that was actually in the book that came with the
    synth. involved putting a clavinet through an envelope
    follower and also using its audio output through the VCA, and
    controlling the VCA with the envelope follower output. Kind
    of like the old Mutron envelope follower effects. Using an
    LFO to control the VCF with some resonance made for a cheap
    phase shifter.
    
    I did get tired of people telling me that the 2600 looked
    like a telephone switchboard...
2466.34Back when I was 7 ...NIMBUS::DAVISFri Oct 12 1990 14:4410
    
    I used mine with a guitar input for a long time, even had the input
    jacks upgraded to 1/4" and some hard-wire routing switches installed.
    The envelope follower was great for backwards guitar effects, and
    controlling the VCA with an LFO gave you tremolo. And, best of all ...
    ring modulating the guitar with an oscillator. Unfortunately the audio
    quality wasn't exactly hi-fi, and you lost a lot of high end on the
    guitar. Eventually stopped using it for that reason.
    
    Rob
2466.35Just got fooled again...WEFXEM::COTELight, sweet, crude...Mon Oct 15 1990 16:368
    Thanks, Mike!
    
    ...interesting to see how adled I've become due to MIDI. *I* would have
    notated the low E as whole notes ('cuz that's what I really play) and
    left the 8th notes up to the LFO.
    
    Edd
    
2466.36How timely of them...DCSVAX::COTELight, sweet, crude...Mon Oct 22 1990 06:404
    According to the latest "Keyboard", the sound was generated by running
    an organ thru an EMS VCS-3.
    
    Edd
2466.37KEYS::MOELLERBorn To Be RiledMon Oct 22 1990 14:257
    >      <<< Note 2466.36 by DCSVAX::COTE "Light, sweet, crude..." >>>
    >                           -< How timely of them... >-
    >According to the latest "Keyboard", the sound was generated
    
    that's amazing - How Do You Do It, Edd ?
    
    karl
2466.38DCSVAX::COTELight, sweet, crude...Mon Oct 22 1990 16:253
    I just call Uncle Dominic and ask...
    
    Edd
2466.39Yeeeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhh!!!!!TROA09::CONNOLLYWed Apr 17 1991 20:0122
    re: 36,37,38
    
    You probably do the same stuff on the VCS-3 that you were suggesting be
    done on the ARP. Like most analog synths of the time, they had the
    usual VCO, VCA, LFO etc. controls. However, the most endearing feature
    of the VCS-3 (our high school got one in the late 70's) was how you
    made connections between the modules. Patch cords? (no). Switches?
    (no). Jumpers? (sort of). It had this neat little grid that looked like
    the board for the game 'Battleship' (I'm really dating myself now), and
    you had little metal contact 'pins' that you put in the grid to connect
    modules between each other. What a concept, eh?
    
    	Also of note (maybe pun intended) is the fact that VCS-3 synths
    also figured prominently in the recording of a certain classic album
    release by Pink Floyd (hint: a selection called 'On The Run', which has
    some effects that have a passing resemblance to those in our favourite
    tune by the WHO).
    
    Just adding my $.02 ($.01 US).
    
    Cal Connolly (good day, eh?)