T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
902.1 | Nights in brown oxide | YUPPY::PANES | A heart of gold and a knob of butter | Thu Sep 12 1991 17:14 | 4 |
| The Mellotron was/is a pain in the arse. Loading the different tapes, requires
a large wing-span, and complete abstinance.
Stuart Albatross-Panes
|
902.2 | Bontempi Nirvana | YUPPY::OHAGANB | Bontempi King | Thu Sep 12 1991 18:38 | 9 |
| The mellotron had nothing on the Bontempi. Ooohh just thinking about
it conjures up images of Butlins cabaret acts and wonderfully awful
pub entertainers. That tinny organ sound, those authentic drum beats.
I will not be complete until I've learned to play such classics
written for the Bontempi such as "Begin the Begin" and "Country Roads".
Incidentally, as some have guessed wrongly from the p-name, I don't
actually own God's gift to music. But one day I will...
:^) :^)
|
902.3 | Hammond eggsellence | CRATE::LAVIN | | Thu Sep 12 1991 18:52 | 15 |
| What about the Hammond organ?
This was used to great effect in the old "progressive rock" days by
such acts as The Nice, ELP and Atomic Rooster.
Michael Jackson used it on BAD.
And nowadays it's become popular again, being used by the likes of
James and the James Taylor Quartet (not THAT James Taylor).
It's a lot less cissy than the melotron and not half as silly as the
Bontempi organ.
Barry
|
902.4 | Farfisa roolz OK! | ESGWST::RDAVIS | It's what I call an epic | Fri Sep 13 1991 00:15 | 3 |
| You're gonna cry... cry cry cry now...
? and the Hystericals
|
902.5 | Another Mellotron fan | FUNYET::ANDERSON | VMS: First and Last and Always | Fri Sep 13 1991 04:54 | 7 |
| Remember when Mike Pinder of the Moody Blues was such the master of the
Mellotron that they called it the Pindertron? The Moodies have never been the
same since he left.
Paul
P. S. Have you heard their latest drek?
|
902.6 | Re .3 � What about the Hammond organ? | COMICS::WEGG | Some hard boiled eggs & some nuts. | Fri Sep 13 1991 09:51 | 13 |
| There was a bit about the Hammond Organ on the Radio a couple of
weeks back. It has received a bit of a revival lately, Chris Rea
used one in Auberge(sp).
The trouble is there is a part (I can't remember which) that is
essential to its distinctive sound, which gradually wears out and
is no longer obtainable.
I have to say, however, that generally the sounds of these old
keyboards brings back too many memories of boring Summer afternoons
round the bandstand in Bognor park!
Ian (who once built his own Stylophone).
|
902.7 | spelling mistakes, bad grammar - what more could you want | YUPPY::PANES | A heart of gold and a knob of butter | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:38 | 20 |
| <<< Note 902.6 by COMICS::WEGG "Some hard boiled eggs & some nuts." >>>
-< Re .3 � What about the Hammond organ? >-
> The trouble is there is a part (I can't remember which) that is
> essential to its distinctive sound, which gradually wears out and
> is no longer obtainable.
Yer actual Hammond would be put through yer actula Leslie cabinet.
This was a big old lump of wood with a couple of speakers that would
rotate at varying speeds and this helped the Hammond to have a
distintive sound. I believe that Yamaha brought in a more uptodate
version ( transistors and all that new guff ), but a similar effect
can now be gained thru' little boxes.
Technology marches relentlessly on.
Stuart
( a little too embarrassed to talk about his own organ's capabilities)
|
902.8 | Still got a Mellotron? | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:44 | 17 |
| Re .1
Stuart - do I take it that you own/have owned one of these magic
beasts? Aside from making you look like a seabird, I'd be interested
to know what you thought of it musically. What sounds did you use?
There was a fascinating article on the 'Tron in one of the keyboard
magazines a couple of months back. I was surprised at how few of the
things were actually made. It would be interesting to know how many
are left. Having so many mechanical parts, I guess a lot of them have
disintegrated by now!
Incidentally, I can't play any keyboard - I'm just an enthusiastic
listener...
Ian
|
902.9 | Pindertron remembered | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:50 | 10 |
| Re .5
Yes - I well remember the days of the 'Pindertron'. Interesting how it
always sounded smoother when used by the MB's than when used by, for
example, King Crimson. Maybe it is the way it was recorded.
Can you explain what a 'drek' is?!
Ian
|
902.10 | Hammond memories | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Fri Sep 13 1991 11:06 | 17 |
| Re .6
I heard that item too. I think the part that wears out is a titanium
strip.
I have to confess that the Hammond is my second-favourite keyboard.
Memories of Keith Emerson stabbing his 'spare' Hammond... Apparently
when he did it during the recording of the Five Bridges Suite he
actually got an electric shock! Can you imagine anybody treating
todays high-tech Midi-based keyboards like that? I'd be interested to
know why the Hammond managed to sound so much gutsier than other
electric organs of the period.
I still prefer the Mellotron though...
Ian
|
902.11 | whirr whirr whirr | YUPPY::PANES | Melts in your mouth, not in your hand | Fri Sep 13 1991 12:00 | 10 |
| I have never owned a Mellotron but used to work with them
occasionally. At the time there was a limited choice of tapes, although
rumours abounded that people like McCartney would make his own.
Great care had to be taken when changing tapes, a little bit
of stretching and the "magic" was lost. The other thing that a lot of
people forgot was that you could only sustain a note for 7 seconds
( if my memory serves me correctly ) and there would be a slight pause
whilst the tape was "rewound".
Stuart
|
902.12 | Hammond back-ache | CASEE::MERRICK | Life's a bowl of cherry pips | Fri Sep 13 1991 13:26 | 4 |
| A Hammond was a wonderful machine, unless you had to carry one up
several flights of narrow stairs with lots of right-angle corners...
|
902.13 | | RIVAGE::GATES | | Fri Sep 13 1991 14:41 | 8 |
| Could someone explain in a bit more detail how a Mellotron worked?
I have a mental picture of a keyboard hooked up to tape machine that
plays a pre-recorded sound sample at different speeds depending on the
key that is pressed. I am sure this is wrong as you then have a
monophonic instrument.
Thanks,
Barry.
|
902.14 | The Mellotron Described | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Fri Sep 13 1991 15:18 | 55 |
| Re .13
Each key on the Mellotron actuated a separate strip of tape. It was a
strip, rather than a loop, so that you could could reproduce the
'attack' transient of each note - for example, if you used it to
reproduce the sound of a piano (a bit pointless really!), you would
hear the sound of the hammer striking the strings followed by the note
decaying away.
There were three unfortunate consequences of this approach:
- The note only lasted as long as the strip of tape allowed. I believe
this was eight seconds, not seven as indicated in an earlier reply
- Once the note had run out, there was a delay while the tape strip was
rewound from the box it dropped into
- Being a mechanical device, it took a finite time for the tape to
start moving after the key was depressed. This (I am told - I've
never had my hands on a Mellotron) led to a 'dead' feel to the keys.
I read an interview with Vangelis once where he stated that he
disliked the instrument for this reason. It tended to be used to
provide good, meaty backing sounds, rather than as a lead instrument
- probably because of the lack of responsiveness.
In practice, there were several variations on the basic theme. The
'standard' Mellotron looked much like a conventional organ, albeit with
a short keyboard. There were versions with two keyboards side by side,
and versions with three different segments (each containing a different
sound) on each strip of tape. I believe that the most sophisticated
versions were capable of reproducing up to 1,500 different
sounds/notes. Not bad for primitive technology!
You could change the whole bank of tapes if you wished, thus giving
access to (in theory) an infinite range of sounds. However, if you
read one of the earlier replies, you'll see that you needed arms as
long as an albatross's wings to do this!
One more bit of information - Rick Wakeman and a mate of his called
Biro developed a similar machine that used tape loops. It was called
the Birotron (original, huh?), but I've only ever seen it credited once
- on Rick Wakeman's 'Criminal Record'. The lack of attack and decay
transients makes it sound totally bland and wimpy in comparison to the
Mellotron.
Some of the later versions of the Mellotron were sold as Novotrons (or
was it Novatrons?). I've seen these credited on a couple of Steve
Hackett's albums.
I could go on like this for hours (I said I was an enthusiast!), but I
better stop for now.
Ian
|
902.15 | | MVSUPP::SYSTEM | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Fri Sep 13 1991 15:27 | 18 |
| My brother had a Mellotron until a couple of years ago. (He also had a
Hammond M1 and Leslie cabinet, as it happens).
Mellotrons have a "tape frame" inside them with a length of tape (and,
presumably a read head) for each note. They are fully polyphonic if I remember
rightly.
There is a switch on the keyboard to allow you to switch between tracks on
the tapes, giving you a choice (albeit limited) of different "instruments".
The standard tape frame was strings and flutes (very "intro to Strawberry
Fields")... also we definitely had a tape frame with human choir voices,
but I can't remember if this was on the "default" tape frame.
As noted previously, it was not easy to change tape frames.
My main comment on the Mellotron is that it was a b*gger of a job to keep it
in concert pitch. (If you listen to Moody Blues stuff closely,
you'll notice that they didn't quite manage to do this in many cases.)
I seem to remember there is a fine tune control for the tape speed (pitch)
on the keyboard somewhere...
|
902.16 | Analogue artifacts... | RIVAGE::GATES | | Fri Sep 13 1991 15:42 | 2 |
| Thanks for the info. These things sound fascinating!
I'm sure they will be a collectors item in years to come.
|
902.17 | Mellotrons on COMET::MUSIC | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Fri Sep 13 1991 17:47 | 5 |
| If anyone is interested, since starting this Note I have found another
on the same subject. It is #184 on Conference COMET::MUSIC.
Ian
|
902.18 | No its not | XSTACY::PATTISON | A rolling stone gets the worm | Fri Sep 13 1991 18:33 | 7 |
|
Before you all rush to your keypads..
Ian meant Note 184.* on COMET::RECORDS.
Dave
|
902.19 | | KERNEL::HUDSON | that's what I think | Sat Sep 14 1991 12:36 | 12 |
|
>One more bit of information - Rick Wakeman and a mate of his called
>Biro developed a similar machine that used tape loops. It was called
>the Birotron (original, huh?), but I've only ever seen it credited once
>- on Rick Wakeman's 'Criminal Record'. The lack of attack and decay
>transients makes it sound totally bland and wimpy in comparison to the
>Mellotron.
Another place that it is credited is when Rick uses it on the Yes
album 'Tormato'. I'd always wondered what it was.
nick
|
902.20 | Drek | FUNYET::ANDERSON | VMS: First and Last and Always | Mon Sep 16 1991 03:31 | 7 |
| re .9
"Drek" is not in my dictionary, unfortunately, but if you'd heard the new Moody
Blues album you'd know what I meant. I guess "sludge" or "pap" or "waste"
would be just as descriptive.
Paul
|
902.21 | In Tune With Mellotrons and Moogs | UBOHUB::CURRIE_I | | Mon Sep 16 1991 14:56 | 23 |
| Ref the comment in .15 - I can vouch for the difficulty in keeping the
Mellotron in pitch. I saw King Crimson live several times, and I well
remember Robert Fripp and one of the other band members (was the name
David Cross?) adjusting their respective Mellotrons to get them in the
same pitch. This exercise was well worth sitting through, as it
preceded the playing of 'Devil's Triangle' (from 'In The Wake Of
Poseidon'). Apparently Fripp and co. originally wanted to play 'Mars'
from the 'Planets Suite', but the publishers (who I think were Boosey
and Hawkes) refused them permission on the grounds that it wasn't
scored for two Mellotrons, bass and drums! So instead they wrote this
piece based around a similarly incessant drumbeat, massive chords and
huge crescendos. Try listening to it in a darkened room at full
volume...
Incidentally, I seem to remember that early Moog synthesisers also
suffered from pitch problems. I heard an anecdotal story that when
Keith Emerson first used one on stage (big as a bus and monophonic to
boot!), he had Mike Vickers underneath during the entire performance
constantly retuning it because it was so susceptible to humidity
...etc.
Ian
|
902.22 | Welcome to virtual reality! | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Mon Sep 16 1991 15:09 | 5 |
| � Try listening to it in a darkened room at full volume...
Yeah, and I'll bring the Magic Mushrooms! :^)
Mark
|
902.23 | Potted Mellotron Discography | UBOHUB::CURRIE_I | | Wed Sep 18 1991 15:03 | 64 |
| Just for fun, I tried listing all the artists/tracks I could think of
that used the Mellotron. Here goes (in no particular order):
Individual singles/tracks:
Traffic - Hole In My Shoe
Jethro Tull - Witches Promise
Kinks - Days
OMD - Maid of Orleans (The Waltz Joan of Arc)
- Navigation [B-side of above]
Simon Dupree and the Big Sound - Kites
Elton John - Daniel
- Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds
Rolling Stones - We Love You
- 2000 Light Years From Home
Beatles - Strawberry Fields
- ?Flying [From Magical Mystery Tour]
Flowerpot Men - Let's Go To San Francisco
Cream - Doing That Scrapyard Thing
Julie Driscoll/Brian Auger Trinity - This Wheel's On Fire
Bee Gees - Every Christian Lion Hearted Man
- World
Major Users
-----------
King Crimson
Genesis
Moody Blues
Yes/Rick Wakeman
Strawbs
Tangerine Dream
Steve Hackett (Novotron)
Occasional Users
----------------
Led Zeppelin
Uriah Heep
10cc
Pink Floyd (Sysyphus on 'Ummagumma')
Elton John
Greenslade
Obscure Users
-------------
Spring
Jonesy
PFM
Now didn't you want to know that!
Interesting that they are *all* British (or in the case of PFM,
British-based) groups. I believe there were major problems getting the
Mellotron approved for use in the US - their equivalent of the
Musician's Union reckoned that it would put musicians out of work by
replacing string sections ..etc. Anyone know anything about this?
Ian
|
902.24 | Any More For The List? | UBOHUB::CURRIE_I | | Wed Sep 18 1991 15:06 | 5 |
| Re .23
Can anyone add to the list?!
Ian
|
902.25 | BJH | UBOHUB::CURRIE_I | | Wed Sep 18 1991 15:42 | 5 |
| Re .23
Oops - missed one. Major User - Barclay James Harvest.
Ian
|
902.26 | PFM! | FUNYET::ANDERSON | VMS: First and Last and Always | Thu Sep 19 1991 00:21 | 8 |
| These were all my favorite bands of the seventies and a good part of the
eighties!
I didn't think anyone else remembered Premiata Forneria Marconi.
Did Eloy use the Mellotron?
Paul
|
902.27 | PFM | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Thu Sep 19 1991 12:36 | 23 |
| RE .26
This information is based on memory - I never actually owned any PFM
records. Maybe someone else can confirm.
Incidentally (I'm a mine of useless information), I believe PFM were
named after an Italian patisserie (cake shop) or something similar. I
also seem to remember they had some connection with Pete Sinfield (the
original lyricist for King Crimson). Is their music any good - i.e.
would it be worth trying to track down old albums to listen to?
I'll be even more impressed if anyone out there has heard of Spring or
Jonesy. I saw them both as support bands when I was at Exeter
University in the seventies and subsequently bought an album by each group.
I sold the Jonesy record, but still own the Spring opus. I rate this
very highly - several of my friends bought copies after hearing it.
When I was living in a bed-sit in Bournemouth (exciting, huh?!) a
couple of years later, one of the girls who I shared the house with
nearly beat my door down when she heard me playing it. Said she would
do anything (well, *almost* anything!) to own a copy...
Ian
|
902.28 | Manfred Mann | ODDONE::CURRIE_I | | Thu Sep 19 1991 17:39 | 9 |
| Re .23
Two more for the list:
Manfred Mann - Ha Ha Said The Clown
- Semi Detached Suburban Mr James
Ian
|
902.29 | PFM | FUNYET::ANDERSON | VMS: First and Last and Always | Fri Sep 20 1991 02:21 | 21 |
| I just looked and I have *five* PFM albums:
1973 Photos of Ghosts Manticore
1974 The World Became the World "
1974 Cook (live) "
1976 Chocolate Kings Asylum
1977 Jet Lag "
I remember liking The World Became the World quite a bit, although I haven't
listened to it in years. The liner notes indicate that Pete Sinfield wrote the
English lyrics. Photos of Ghosts credits Pete with producing two tracks and
remixing the others. As I recall, Pete's wonderful album Still is also on the
Manticore label.
Keyboards (can we presume including our beloved Mellotron??) are played by
Flavio Premoli. Jet Lag lists him as playing a "Pari" organ, electric piano,
and micro Moog.
I guess it's time to dust off the turntable and give these a spin...
Paul
|
902.30 | | PSYLO::WILSON | Physical Confetti | Mon Sep 23 1991 14:40 | 4 |
| Pink Floyd's Rick Wright used one on their first two albums, "Piper at
the Gates of Dawn" and "Saucerful of Secrets," in addition to
"Ummagumma."
|
902.31 | | HNDMTH::TUTAK | Nananana...nananana...JOSE...goodbye...! | Mon Sep 23 1991 19:46 | 34 |
|
The keyboard player I used to perform with back in the late 70s had a
Mellotron 400 in his arsenal, using choir, flutes and cello tapes. It
was a pretty temperamental beast, from what I remember. It was also
amusing to have to hear a keyboard instrument being tuned (and often).
I also remember the tape drives or what ever they were called were
pretty fussy about temperature. If they weren't warmed up, they'd
function intermittently. Winter gigs were particularly amusing. After
being in the truck all day, the instrument had to be the first thing
carted in, so it could begin to warm through. On occasion, I
remember a job of one of the road crew was to remove the back, hook up
a portable hair blower, and begin hosing the inside with warm air for
about 15 minutes.
But when it was working right, there was nothing like that choir sound.
Some favorite 'mellotroney' things:
-Many by Gentle Giant, including 'Pantagruel's Nativity' and other
things from "Acquiring the Taste".
-Greenslade's "Feathered Friends", "An English Western", "Drowning Man"
and "Chalkhill".
-All of "Foxtrot" and "Selling England" by Genesis (especially the
backdrop to the synth solo in "Cinema Show", and the chords after
the guitar solo in "Firth of Fifth").
...I believe the Small Faces also used one on 'Ogden's Nut Gone Flake',
Thys Van Leer used one on the first few Focus albums, and Isao Tomita
used it a lot on "Snowflakes are Dancing".
Peter
|
902.32 | The subject's | BASCAS::CURRIE_I | Dyslexic snice brith | Tue Dec 24 1991 11:39 | 8 |
| I missed another classic track from the list in .23:
Space Oddity by David Bowie. Mellotron played by Rick Wakeman. There
was a similar sound on Ashes To Ashes, but I suspect it may have been
sampled.
Ian
|
902.33 | AWB | LMOADM::LEVIN | High quality riff-raff | Tue Mar 10 1992 21:32 | 7 |
| re .23
I actually listened to a *record* last night - and have decided to
upgrade to CD - to get to the point - the mellotron is used on one cut
in the album Average White Band (can't remember the name of the song).
Suegene
|
902.34 | | COMICS::WEGG | Some hard boiled eggs & some nuts. | Thu Jun 25 1992 09:57 | 23 |
| The Mellotron has been featured on Danny Baker's show� for the last
few days, and this morning Rick Wakeman phoned in to talk about it.
He said he owned six of them all together - he would have four on
stage at one time, and if he still had two working at the end of a
concert they'd have a party! The main problems were the tapes
snapping, a note could only be played for a maximum of 8 seconds,
and the more keys you pressed simultaneously, the slower it went!
Asked when he knew the days of the Mellotron were over, he replied
"about half an hour after I played my first one!"
He did say, though, that all other electronic keyboard instruments
were pretty unreliable at that time, and the Mellotron was a great
advance.
They also played a bit of the first Mellotron "hit": Manfred Mann's
"Ha Ha Said The Clown", and Bowie's "Space Oddity".
Ian.
� Danny Baker's Morning Edition on Radio 5. The best morning radio
programme by a factor of a million.
|
902.35 | best joke this week so far was | MARVIN::WARWICK | Trevor Warwick | Thu Jun 25 1992 12:44 | 4 |
|
That famous Doors album, "No-one here gets out awake"...
|
902.36 | The Great Tron Revival..?!?! | KIRKTN::WATSONT | | Fri Jan 07 1994 17:49 | 18 |
| Hello there ....if anyone out there still reads this note,you may
be interested in a CD `compilation` featuring - apparently - well known
`Tron users.It`s called - rather wittily -`The Rhyme Of The Ancient Sampler`
and features new compositions by these folks to showcase the Mellotron
and its range of sounds.
Artists I can remember include Mike Pinder,Patrick Moraz,Blue
Weaver,Bill Nelson and BJH amongst many others.It`s on Voiceprint
records,don`t know how widely available it is but I bought it mail
order from CD Services in Dundee (see small ads in Vox magazine).
The music is most definitely `progressive` and would I suspect
appeal to most of the noters who have been in this topic.
It also features a booklet for an inner jacket which has a short
history of the m/c,its development and its demise.A `bonus` track is
the original demonstration disc which was available at the time which
is highly amusing.
BTW the disc does feature some spiffing guitar work from unnamed
players as well as all the keyboard stuff.
|
902.37 | Catalogue Number? | CHEFS::CURRIEI | Dyslexic snice brith | Wed Apr 20 1994 15:38 | 7 |
| Re .36:
Do you have the catalogue number of this record? I'd love to get hold
of a copy.
Ian
|
902.38 | | RIOT01::SUMMERFIELD | Essex Man on the Info Highway | Thu Apr 21 1994 11:11 | 6 |
| re .37
Hello Ian, good to see your fascination with the mellotron is unchanged.
I guess that 1979 has yet to arrive for you. :^)
Balders
|
902.39 | Catalogue Number! | CHEFS::CURRIEI | Dyslexic snice brith | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:12 | 8 |
| Re .36
In answer to my own question, catalogue number is VP141CD
BTW, Correct spelling is *RIME* of the Ancient Sampler.
Ian
|