Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumwalkingman
(10,476 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,112 posts)But, he has a friend through my Cub Scout days that had a C-3 with a Leslie 147 cabinet.
Same as a B-3 but even less mobile and had the locking lid to cover things up when not in use.
My first piano teacher also had a 147 cabinet but I don't remember the organ being big. Maybe an M series like the one used on Whiter Shade Of Pale.
My dad's was nice, but had different circuitry than a B-3 so it didn't sound the same. Didn't have the key click or the percussive pop of the B-3.
I have a killer B-3 patch on my QS-8.1, with the mod wheel used to adjust distortion to get that Jon Lord growl. The sliders function as drawbar, so I can change timbre mid note.
It's not quite a B-3, but still awfully authentic.
walkingman
(10,476 posts)I thought "96 Tears" (? and the Mysterians) was a Hammond but turns out it was a Vox.
Great sounds....☮
ProfessorGAC
(76,112 posts)That was the Continental's little brother. I got it for only $75.
We didn't do the music that a Vox organ worked on so I used a Big Muff Pi to add growl and roll off the highs. As close to Deep Purple as I could get.
Fortunately, I had access to a Micromoog, an Ella's String Machine, & a Wurlitzer electric piano. So I had a fill rig.
City of 75,000 and I was one of only 2 guys in town that had a full rig.
Leghorn21
(14,044 posts)MY FAVORITE SONG ON THE ENTIRE PLANET
I couldnt name another song that *gets* to me as much as Green Onions!!
Thanks, Cosmo!
3catwoman3
(28,852 posts)Leghorn21
(14,044 posts)There are plenty of cool songs, but from those opening notes?
Yeah, this is the coolest.
3catwoman3
(28,852 posts)demonstrate the dance in gym class. They were 2 of the cool kids, and I was massively envious of their ability to dance, and of the female classmates very in wardrobe and beautiful blonde hair.
Leghorn21
(14,044 posts)Im a couple years behind you (?), but I love that hearing this song takes you to a place you once were and how you felt in the moment!! (I do not, sadly, recall when I first heard it, probably 3, 4? years later)
Which reminds ME of a very specific moment in *gym class*, 1967 one of us brought in a portable record player, apparently, and a song called Funky Broadway (still love that song and Wilson Pickett!!) - now I dont know how, but one of my friends knew how to do that dance you just kind of bend over and bring your arms up together in time to the best, BOOM! And thats pretty much how I danced from then on out!
I grew a quick dislike of music videos when they showed up, because to me, that robbed listeners of that first moment they ever heard a song - the big tunes of the 60s and 70s, if I hear one, I usually go right to an exact memory of where I was when I first heard it (magic moments!) videos, to me, replaced those very personal memories with artificial images and ideas that took away from peoples deep connections to music
Im just sayin!!!