M1 lays down the lead organ part for Seeing Jimmy.
Monday, November 22, 2004
M1 Tracking
M1 Tracking
M1 lays down the lead organ part for Seeing Jimmy.
THis tune was one of those where M1 brought sent some lyrics and then a few days later we were jamming on the acoustic and the M3 in the Music room and we put the lyrics to a set of chord changes M1 had. The two fit well and Seeing Jimmy was there.
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Tracking Seeing Jimmy
Seeing Jimmy
Jimmy lived his life out
In the Sunset Ranch motel
Just a bit off Prospect
With pavement for a view
Surrounded by his litter
Magazines and trash
TV always on
Smoke streaming from the ash
It's not easy
To talk to Jimmy
It's not easy
To drink his beer
Always makes you wonder
What the hell you're doing here
A military veteran
Maybe never went to war
Crippled by dementia
Or dreams of something more
Mary comes on Tuesdays
To bring him his hot meal
She yells a little at him
But asks him how he feels
It's not easy
To talk to Jimmy
It's not easy
To drink his beer
Always makes you wonder
What the hell you're doing here
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Friday, November 19, 2004
Wurlitzer 200 Rescue
Hey the Wurli is ALIVE
Yesterday after I recovered from a episode of intestinal discharging I set to getting the Wurli that was rescued from disposal working. I popped the case via three screw under the front edge. The case was nearly fused to the wood base from years of no access...First I inspected....no burns on the power amp and the only problem I could visually see was that an aluminum guard that covered the dampers arms for each key showed signs of being bend. On the high side of the key board, the highest key's damper arm was broken. I took the aluminum guard off and found that the top four keys do not even have damping mechanisms. This looks like it is by design because the metal reeds that create the tone for the highest four notes are so short damping them would be silly. Check out the flash link from the keyboard museum that describes the Wurlitzer 200 action.
I removed the broken piece and then checked the action on all the keys. One small adjustment to the middle c and it appeared all the keys and reeds were in good working condition. A little stiff from lack of play but that will no doubt be corrected. The inside was surprisingly clean BTW.
I then set to rewiring the power. I took an old power cord from a computer and cut the end off and removed the old oval power cord connector on the Wurli and spliced the new cord in. I have a modern three prong power socket I could use but I did not want to spend a gob of time modifying the case to find the thing didn't power up. So I will add the nifty socket sometime in the future. Well I agonized about which wire went where...but that was easy enough to figure out with a mutli-meter to id the wires on the power cord to match them up with the green, white and black wires of the Wurli power. I plugged it in and put the volume knob back on the pot and turned the power on....
The light came on. No smoke or sparks. I heard a small hiss coming from the speakers....I started playing each key and there it is...that unmistakable sound. Super Tramp, The Doors, Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Sly and Family Stone and Steve Winwood came to mind...I started off playing some goofy things that I do on the organ and I could hear and feel why this instrument is so cool. I quickly set to cleaning it up. I took fantastik to the plastic case and cleaned all the filth from it and then applied armour-all. Nice and shiny now a few scratches and stains but not bad. I then carefully cleaned each key and removed as much dust and dirt from the felts on the case and around the keyboard. I put it all back together and then sat down and played for an hour or two.
The sound is awesome, cranking the volume all the way brings out the character of the pickups and hides the physical mechanism sounds. The sustain mechanism works but there is no pedal and the original legs are missing as well. Replacements can be had or a simple keyboard rack would work.
As for the action. When the Wurli is off you can't really judge the action because the reed does make a sound when powered down but they only really sound when struck hard. The action is there when the power is one. A bit stiff but you can easily layback and play soft passages with ease. In fact it is surprisingly expressive and the touch is very intuitive. This is the real deal. I have yet to plug it into an amp yet but that will probably happen soon. All in all I spent about three hours playing and I could feel the action loosening up. Regular playing is the best thing for this Wurli. It will make a great addition to the upcoming Soul Amp CD.
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Thursday, November 18, 2004
Vintage Ludwigs by M2
Constructed in 1970 the all maple,blue sparkle shells have held up amazingly well.This kit has seen literally hundreds,if not a thousand break downs,setups,and gigs over the last 34 years.It is a typical rock 5 piece set with a 12"x 9" and 13"x 10" rack toms,16"x 16"floor tom,22"x 14" bass,and a 60's era 14"x 5 1/2" supra-phonic stainless steel snare.Remo Ebony Series (medium weight) heads are used on all toms..batter side and resonant.The batter tom heads each have a "Dead Ringer" foam muffling ring applied to their underside.This gives the toms a wonderfully warm round tone with little to moderate sustain,and no obnoxious overtones.They are dynamically sensitive as well.The toms really sing when played at gig volume.No modification was needed for the studio.The bass drum is equiped with an Aquarian Super Kick 2 ply head.This head is self muffled with an integrated thin white foam ring around it's internal perimeter.This head is awesome.An Attack brand "No Overtone" head serves as the front man on this drum. It would make a very poor choice as a batter head,but works fine as a resonant. Contrary to it's name,this head wreaks of overtone.Live,this bass drum sounds HUGE.The tone,punch,and projection are amazing.In the studio,the front head was removed and the front of the bass was wrapped in foam insulation to help the mix.It kicks ass.The pitted old Ludwig snare has a Remo Ebony on top,and a standard Remo "snare side" on the bottom. Muffling is regulated by the stock internal damper.This drum provides a nice snare "pop" and an awesome cutting rimshot that is great for penetrating live. This old set of Ludwigs is a life long friend. If you're not happy with your crappy Pearl/Tama sound,ditch them and start looking for vintage maple Ludwigs.
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
M1's CX-3
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M1 plays on the new (lightly used) CX-3 just purchased off e-bay. The Korg CX-3 2.0 is a tonewheel generator modeling keyboard. Considered by many to be the defacto standard by which all other "clone-wheels" are judged. It basically has all the stuff you would expect a classic drawbar tonewheel generator analog organ to have in a digital package. So m1 and Soul Amp has got the real deal in the Hammond M3 though it is sans Leslie cabinet at this time and a portable B3 and Leslie in the Korg CX-3...
Sing Goon, Sing
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Actually this is a good shot of the MXL V69 Mogami and a MXL 990. We took these two tracks and bounced them together and created one mono 24/48 track that sounded very nice indeed. No phase problems or clipping as each track was kept low and then when combined we made sure there was no clipping. We could of just normalized one of the mic tracks but thought they were better together.
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
End of an Era...
Control Table
Another shot of the M3
NOTE: The M3 "Arch" didn't fit down the stairs. It wasn't even tried. it can be used for recording though by running cords up the vent which is located just out of the picture to the left. The vent was modified to allow cat access to the basement and the adjoining living room. Thus the music room became a nice iso room. - Brad O.
The Music room doubles as a individual practice room and vocal iso booth. Wood floors, square room with plaster give this room a nice tight bright natural reverb. Great for vocals.
More Shots from the Cat Box
YOu just can't get these speakers any more. No farty tone here. High gain creamy overdrive and the chimey clean tones...big an fat, warm and tasty - Brad