fbpx
Wikipedia

Clonewheel organ

A clonewheel organ is an electronic musical instrument that emulates (or "clones") the sound of the electromechanical tonewheel-based organs formerly manufactured by Hammond from the 1930s to the 1970s. Clonewheel organs generate sounds using solid-state circuitry or computer chips, rather than with heavy mechanical tonewheels, making clonewheel organs much lighter-weight and smaller than vintage Hammonds, and easier to transport to live performances and recording sessions.

The Hammond XB-2 recreates the sound of the vintage electromechanical Hammond organs in a much lighter, smaller keyboard that uses electronic circuits to reproduce the sound of the spinning tonewheels.

The phrase "clonewheel" is a play on words in reference to how the original Hammond produces sound through "tonewheels". The first generation of clonewheel organs used synthesizer voices, which were not able to accurately reproduce the Hammond sound. In the 1990s and 2000s, clonewheel organs began using digitally-sampled real Hammond sounds or digital signal processing emulation techniques, which were much better able to capture the nuances of the vintage Hammond sound.[citation needed]

Clonewheel organs can be either electronic keyboard-based instruments such as the Korg CX-3 or the Roland VK-7; or keyboardless emulation devices, which include MIDI-compatible tone modules, such as the E-MU B-3 module and software-based "virtual synths" (such as the B4 by Native Instruments [discontinued]). To use keyboardless emulation devices, they need to be connected to a MIDI keyboard controller.

History edit

Original electromechanical Hammond edit

 
Typical tonewheel organ and rotating speaker (Hammond B3 & Leslie).
 
Drawbars
 
Tonewheel (right) rotates beneath electro-magnetic pickup (left)

The Hammond organ is an electromechanical organ that was designed and built by Laurens Hammond in 1934. While the Hammond organ was originally sold to churches as a lower-cost alternative to the pipe organ, it came to be used for jazz, blues, and then to a greater extent in rock music (in the 1960s and 1970s) and gospel music.

The original Hammond organ imitated the function of a pipe organ's ranks of pipes in multiple registers by using additive synthesis of waveforms from harmonic series to generate its sounds. The Hammond organ's individual waveforms were made by mechanical tonewheels which rotated beneath electromagnetic pickups. The component waveforms can be mixed in varying ratios by using drawbars mounted above the two keyboards. Hammond organs also have a harmonic percussion effect, in which the 2nd and 3rd harmonic tones can be added to the attack envelope of a note.

Hammond organs have a distinctive percussive key click, which is the attack transient that occurs when all nine key contacts close, causing an audible pop or click. Originally, key click was considered to be a design defect and Hammond worked to eliminate or at least reduce it by using equalization filters. However, some performers liked the percussive effect, and it has become part of the classic sound that modern imitators of the Hammond organ have tried to reproduce. The classic way of enhancing the sound of a Hammond organ is to use a rotating speaker known as a Leslie speaker or cabinet.

First "clones" edit

 
Korg CX-3 (1980)
According to journalist Gordon Reid, it "came close to emulating the true depth and passion of a vintage Hammond."[1]

Transporting the heavy Hammond organ, bass pedalboard (a B-3 organ, bench and pedalboard weighs 425 pounds/193 kg) and Leslie speaker cabinets to performance venues makes it cumbersome for artists to tour with a vintage electromechanical organ. As well, the Hammond, as with all vintage electromechanical instruments, faces the risk of technical problems with the tonewheels or electric motor, which may be difficult to resolve in a touring situation. As such, there was a strong demand amongst musicians for a way of recreating the Hammond sound in a more portable, reliable fashion.

Some early emulation devices from the 1970s were criticized for their unrealistic imitation of the Hammond sound, particularly in the way the upper harmonics were voiced, and in the simulation of the rotary Leslie speaker effect. Refinements to Hammond emulations eventually led to the development of relatively light electronic keyboard instruments such as the Korg CX-3 (1980), and the Roland VK-1 (1980), which produced fairly realistic re-creations of the Hammond tone. While these instruments were widely used to replace the bulky Hammonds for band tours and club dates, jazz and blues keyboardists still tended to use vintage Hammonds for recordings, because the first clonewheel organs could not reproduce the tonal nuances of the old wooden Hammonds.

1990s and 2000s edit

 
The NordElectro2 reproduces the sound of the Hammond organ and several other electromechanical instruments. Unlike most "clonewheel" instruments, the Nord does not have sliding drawbars. Instead, the player presses buttons which light up a row of LEDs to indicate the drawbar setting.

By the 1990s and 2000s digital signal processing and sampling technologies allowed for better imitation of the original Hammond sound, and a variety of electronic organs, emulator devices, and synthesizers provided an accurate reproduction of the Hammond tone, such as the Kurzweil K2600 and Clavia Nord Electro keyboard. Hammond Suzuki USA currently markets numerous home, church, and professional models that digitally reproduce the sound of vintage Hammond tonewheel organs. Some sophisticated emulation devices have algorithms that recreate many of the nuances of vintage Hammonds, such as the "crosstalk" or "leakage" between tonewheels, the sound of dirty key contacts, key click, a growling tube amplifier, and digital simulations of the rotating Leslie speaker cabinet.

 
Roland VK-7 (1997)
Even though the VK-7 recreates the Hammond sound using electronic circuits, the instrument gives a nod to the traditional heritage of the Hammond by using a wooden case.

Currently, there are numerous B-3 "clones" on the market, which range from full-size, dual keyboard behemoths with real Leslie cabinets from Hammond Suzuki (which can cost over $10,000 US), to inexpensive Casio WK series home keyboards that have a digitally-recreated "tonewheel organ" function (which are available for less than $400 US). In between are numerous keyboard-based models from Hammond, Korg, Roland, Clavia (Nord Series), rack-mounted modules, and software-based "virtual synths" (such as the B4 by Native Instruments) which provide simulations of the B-3 sound. There is even a model by the Pari.E company which uses a modern version of the classic Hammond tonewheels, not a digital simulation.

The use of Hammond clones and the merits of using clones versus the vintage electromechanical Hammond is the subject of lively debate amongst musicians. The argument that digital simulations cannot recreate the complex interplay of variables that create the "Hammond sound" (tonewheel leakage, Leslie speaker rotation, etc.) is supported by a review of clones in Keyboard Magazine. The article, entitled "Clonewheel Heaven", reviewed electronic simulations of the traditional Hammond sound, and claimed that some aspects of the vintage electromechanical Hammonds' sound are not accurately reproduced by clones and emulation devices.[2] Nevertheless, the increasing use of clonewheel organs on recordings by jazz and blues organ solo players is testimony to their sound and tone quality; it is also worth noting the wide variety of tonal variations that exist even among genuine vintage tonewheel Hammond organs. Owing to any number of causes — not least of which are the age of its components and the amount of use a tonewheel organ has had — variations in volume levels between tonewheels, varying levels of key click, and other tonal differences are more common than not.

Despite the widespread availability of relatively lower-cost, reliable digital "clones" and emulation devices, and the near-universal use of "clones" for band tours and club gigs, many jazz, blues and gospel keyboardists still have a strong interest in using vintage Hammond organs for studio recordings. Even if a clone is able to accurately reproduce the vintage electromechanical Hammond sound — several companies such as Clavia and Hammond Suzuki are making this claim[citation needed] — performers still have an affection for the look, feel, characteristics and heritage embodied in the much heavier, old wooden vintage instruments.

Format edit

 
A WERSI OX7 organ sound module, which includes drawbars.

Clonewheel organs are available in several formats. The first is an integrated keyboard, in which the keyboard and the circuitry that provides the tonewheel emulation is in the same chassis. A second approach is a sound module, a tabletop device which only provides the organ sounds; it must be connected to a MIDI controller keyboard to be used. The tabletop units vary in sophistication. The least sophisticated units provide a selection of commonly-used tonewheel sounds. More sophisticated units may have drawbars and a number of knobs and buttons for controlling the sound. The third format is as a virtual instrument, which requires a computer and monitor. The virtual instrument may depict the same types of controls that a real tonewheel organ would have on the monitor. The musician then uses a computer mouse or other input to change the settings.

Instruments edit

 
Vox Continental (1962–early 1970s)

Pre-clonewheel organs edit

Early drawbar organs inspired by Hammond
  • Vox (designed by JMI, manufactured by JMI, Thomas, Eko and EME)
    Continental / Continental I (1962–c.1971), Continental II / Super Continental (1966/1967–c.1972), Riviera (1966–c.1972)[3][4]
  • Yamaha A-3 (1966), YC-10 (1969), YC-20 / YC-30 (1970), YC-25D / YC-45D (1972)[5][6]
  • Ace Tone TOP-1 (1968/1969), TOP-6 (c.1970)[7]
  • WLM Organ (1972–1984, made in Finland)
Hammond and related models
 
Hammond X5 (c.1974/1975)
  • Ace Tone  GT-5, GT-7  (1971, predecessor of Hammond/Sakata models)
  • Hammond (manufactured by Sakata)  X-5 (c.1974/1975),[7] X-2 (1978),[8] B-200
  • Roland VK-9, VK-6, VK-09  (c.1978, spin off from Ace Tone)
 
Elka X-50 clonewheel organ (1982)
Italian drawbar organs
  • Farfisa Professional, Professional Duo (early '70s) VIP series ('70s), Professional 88 and 110 (1977/78),
    and console models "Maharani" and "Pergamon"
  • Crumar Haven, Organizer, Organizer2, Organizer T1, T2, Tokata, portable models from 1976 to 1980,
    and consoles 203, 204, 205, 2002, 2003
  • Elka X50 (1982),[9] X55, X605 and X705 (1977–1981)[10]
  • Solton Legend (1980s), B-1000 (c.1977, CRB Diamond 910M) / B 1000 s (c.1981)[11]

etc..

Early clonewheel organs edit

 
Korg BX-3 (1980)
  • Hammond  B-3000  (1976/1978,[8] utilizing LSI for multiplexing, etc.)[12]
  • Korg  CX-3, BX-3  (1980, analog)
  • Roland  VK-1 [13] (1980, analog)
  • Hammond (manufactured by Suzuki)  Super-B  (1986, a first all-digitally sampled organ from Hammond)[14]

Major clonewheel organs edit

 
Hammond XB-3 (1994)
  • Hammond Suzuki XB-1,[15] XB-2 (1991), XB-5 (1993), XB-3 (1994), XC-3 (1995),
    XM-1 / XMc-1 (1997, module),[16] XM-2 / XMc-2 (2006, module),
    XK-2 (1999), XK-3 / XLK-3 (2004),[17] XK-1 (2006), XK-3c (2008), SK1 / SK2 (2011),[18]
    and console models New B-3 (2002),[19] New B-3 mk2, and XH-272 Elegante.
  • Korg New CX-3 [20] and New BX-3 [21] (2000)
 
Clavia Nord C2D Combo Organ (2012–)
Others
  • Böhm Emporio
  • Casio CTK-691/900/7000/etc., WK-3000/3200/3300/3700/3800/etc. – providing digital drawbar organ function.
  • Creamware B4000 (Tonewheel synthesizer)
  • Diversi Musical Instruments DV-Solo, DV-Duo, DV-Duo Plus
  • Ferrofish B4000+
  • E-MU B-3 module
 
KeyB Duo
  • KeyB/DLQ www.keyborgan.com KeyB Duo, KeyB Solo, KeyB Expander[25]
  • Oberheim OB-3,[26] OB-32 ([Oh-Bee-Three-Squared], module)[27] and OB-5
  • Roland Atelier AT-900, AT-900c, AT-800
  • Studiologic Numa Organ
  • Tokai TX-5[28]
  • Vermona Formation 1, 2, 3 and 3M
  • Viscount DB-3,[29] DB-5, Legend, Live, Solo,
  • Voce microB-II V3, V5, V5+ and Key5
  • Wersi Louvre, Scala, Verona, Giga Piano – a German company.
  • Yamaha Reface YC (2015)
  • KeyboardPartner HX3 (Hardware-based physical model) – www.keyboardpartner.com
Software
There are also software emulations available:
Controllers
  • Hamichord M-C3 (powered by GSi VB3 Hamichord edition II)[32]
    Hamichord had been distributed (or produced) by BG's Musical Instruments (BGMI),[33][note 2] then its successor model under Crumar brand has been introduced as following:

Electromagnetic tonewheel organs edit

  • PARI.E K-61 (2006–c.2010s) – an Italian-made B-3 clone which uses an actual electromagnetic tonewheel generator, albeit of modern plastic construction. Also Leslie-clones were made.[36][37][38][note 2][33]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ As of 2010s, the product line of Genuine Soundware and Instruments (GSi; founded by Guido Scognamiglio) is distributed by V.M. Connection di Andrea Agnoletto (V.M. Connection; Quarto d'Altino, Italy)
    • "About". GSi: Genuine Soundware and Instruments.
  2. ^ a b The origin of PARI.E, the Pari organ was a tonewheel organ produced by Anton Parie in Belgium in the early 1960s, then the production of XT0 model was moved to Italy by Alfredo Gioielli around 1969, according to the HammondWiki:
    • Jeff Dairiki (Geoffrey T. Dairiki). "Pari Organs". HammondWiki (dairiki.org).
      "The generator of Pari organs was created by Anton Parie, who started production of an electromagnetic organ in Belgium in the early '60s. Around 1969, production of XT0 model was moved to Italy by Alfredo Gioielli ...", "In 2005 Pari factory re-opened with the name of "PARI.E" the means "pari-electromagnetic" starting the production of a new organ, ... In the latter part of 2006, Pari started production of a new two-manual organ, the new K-61 (and a portable version, the K-61P)."
    For details of old Pari organ, see:
    • Henning Højen. "The Pari XT0 and Attack Organs". Hammond-Leslie.info.
  3. ^ In the late 2000s, Crumar brand have been acquired and revived by BG's Musical Instruments (BGMI; Castelfidardo, Italy) / V.M. Connection di Andrea Agnoletto (V.M. Connection; Quarto d'Altino, Italy), and as of 2010s, the former BGMI's product line have been dealt by V.M. Connection.

References edit

  • . Hammond Zone. Archived from the original on 2010-12-06. Retrieved 2010-12-05. (officially supported by Hammond U.K.)
  1. ^ Reid, Gordon. . Sound on Sound. No. January 2001. Archived from the original on 18 February 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  2. ^ Fortner, Stephen. "Clonewheel Heaven". Keyboard Magazine. No. November 2004.
  3. ^ "Vox". Combo Organ Heaven.
  4. ^ Peterson, David; Denny, Dick (1993). The Vox Story. Guitar History series. Vol. 4. Bold Strummer. ISBN 978-0-933224-70-4.
  5. ^ . Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary. Yamaha Corporation. Archived from the original on 2015-07-13.
  6. ^ "Yamaha". Combo Organ Heaven.
    Note: during the 1969–c.1970, Yamaha manufactured the Hammond V Series transistor organs including Cadette V-100 / V-200, according to Da Hammond Encyclopedia.
  7. ^ a b "Ace Tone". Combo Organ Heaven.
    Note: in the mid-1970s, their joint enterprise with Hammond called Nihon Hammond manufacture the several transistor Hammond organs in Japan and England, including Cadette VS-300 (after 1973), F1000/F2000/F3000, etc., according to Da Hammond Encyclopedia.
  8. ^ a b . Hammond Zone. Archived from the original on 2010-12-08. Retrieved 2010-12-05.
  9. ^ "ELKA X-50". SonicState.com. Released: 1982
  10. ^ "Elka/Unicord". Combo Organ Heaven.
    "X-50 — ... "Hammond emulator" / X-705 — "Full set of Hammond-clone drawbars with seven percussion settings, a full drum machine that was quite impressive for the time, and an 11-preset synth with sounds like guitar, trombone, clarinet, and sax. The synth sounds were polyphonic on the top manual and monophonic on the bottom and pedals. Used by Jean-Michael Jarre. Made from '77 to '81, original price £2662." (Thanks, Les!)"
  11. ^ "Others: Solton". Combo Organ Heaven.
  12. ^ , ずばり!ハモンド!! [Frankly on Hammond] (in Japanese), Hammond Suzuki, 2007-08-08, archived from on 2007-10-12
    [In English: "In 1975, Hammond stop the operation of a tonewheel organ factory in Chicago after the manufacturing of last B-3 ... In 1976, Hammond released a new model B-3000 using a breakthrough mechanism, multiplex system. ... The model B-3000, released in the following year of B-3's discontinuation, was just a model on which Hammond engineers noticed the needs of reproduce of all-elements on tonewheel organ."]
  13. ^ Sam Inglis. "Roland VK-1 Drawbar – Organ (Retro)". Reviews. Sound on Sound (January 1999).
  14. ^ . Hammond Zone. Archived from the original on 2010-12-15. Retrieved 2010-12-05.
  15. ^ Nick Magnus. "Hammond XB-1". Sound on Sound (October 1998).
  16. ^ Nick Magnus. "Hammond XM-1 & XMc-1 – Organ Module & Drawbar Controller". Sound on Sound (May 1997).
  17. ^ "Hammond XK-3/XLK-3 & Leslie 2121/2101 – Modelled Tonewheel Organ & Rotary Speaker System". Sound on Sound (July 2005).
  18. ^ Damien Albetto (2011-08-17). . Instrument Review. Muse Live Music Magazine. Archived from the original on 2011-09-01.
  19. ^ Hugh Robjohns. . Reviews. Sound on Sound (July 2003). Archived from the original on 2006-11-06.
  20. ^ Gordon Reid. . Reviews. Sound on Sound (January 2001). Archived from the original on 2015-02-18. Retrieved 2011-05-16.
  21. ^ Gordon Reid. "Korg BX-3 Organ – Dual-manual Modelled Combo Organ". Reviews. Sound on Sound (August 2003).
  22. ^ Nick Magnus. "Roland VK-7 – Virtual Modelling Tonewheel Organ". Reviews. Sound on Sound (July 1997).
  23. ^ Gordon Reid. . Reviews. Sound on Sound (September 2002). Archived from the original on 2014-03-22.
  24. ^ Hugh Robjohns. "Roland VR760 – Performance Keyboard". Sound on Sound (November 2003).
  25. ^ "KeyB Organ". KeyB/DLQ.
  26. ^ Andy Davies. "Oberheim Eclipse Electronic Piano & OB3 Drawbar Organ Module". Sound on Sound (March 1996).
  27. ^ Nick Magnus. "Oberheim/Viscount OB3-squared – Tonewheel Organ Module". Reviews. Sound on Sound (September 1997).
  28. ^ (in Portuguese), Brazil: Tokai, archived from the original on 2016-03-16, retrieved 18 February 2016
    "O Tokai TX-5 ... O modelo "combo" inclui: TX-5 Classic + Lower + pedaleira PD-2 + móvel ( todas estas peças podem ser adquiridas separadamente )"
    See also: "About us 2012-02-03 at the Wayback Machine".
  29. ^ Gordon Reid. "Viscount DB3 – Viscount DB3 Digital Drawbar Organ". Reviews. Sound on Sound (November 2002).
  30. ^ "VB3 The Ultimate Virtual Tonewheel Organ". GSi Genuine Soundware and Instruments. (founded by Guido Scognamiglio)
  31. ^ "x42 setBfree - ToneWheel Organ". x42 Plugins. Retrieved 2019-09-11.
  32. ^ , Castelfidardo (AN), Italy: BG's Musical Instruments (BGMI), 2009, archived from the original on 2011-09-05
    "HAMICHORD M-C3 ORGAN MIDI CONTROLLER ... In its full configuration ( Meaning M-C3 + Exp-edition ) Hamichord has a PC running Microsoft Windows XP-embedded that runs your favorite organ software. The sound engine of Hamichord is a SPECIAL VERSION OF GSI VB3 called VB3 HAMICHORD EDITION II."
    Note: after the acquisition of CRUMAR by BGMI, the same page can be found under the discontinued page on crumar.it.
  33. ^ a b "Bg'S Srl". Città di Castelfidardo sito ufficiale [City of Castelfidardo website]. Comune di Castelfidardo.
    "Bg's Musical Instruments have more than 40 years of History. The Bg's Srl society was created in 2003 by Mr Mauro Baldassari and Mrs Maria Grazia Gioielli, the daughter of Mr Alfredo Gioielli, the "father" of the Italian Electromagnetic organ, PARI [originating from the generators created by Anton Parie in Belgium in the early 1960s]. The big experience of Mr Alfredo, producer of organs from 1966 to 1982 ... The idea of re-make an organ with genuine electromagnetic tonewheel generator was in our heart from many years and finally, in 2003 we were able to do it: this is the birth of the new K-61 electromagnetic organ together with our Rotary speakers cabinets. ... With our growing range of product ... : Hamichord, Pari.e, Rotary, GSI, Crumar, ..."
  34. ^ "MOJO", CRUMAR, Quarto d'Altino (VE), Italy: V.M. Connection, retrieved 18 February 2016, ... MOJO, a compact, portable, lightweight, elegant, easy to use and affordable dual manual tonewheel organ simulation ... MOJO is powered by GSi VB3 Version II.
  35. ^ "About us", Crumar.it, V.M. Connection, In 2008 V.M. Connection, an Italian society active in development of musical instruments decided to renew the CRUMAR name and brand and started producing keyboards under this name ...
  36. ^ "PARIE New K-61 - In alter Frische". Tests. OKEY (in German). No. 74. January–February 2007.
  37. ^ "PARI.E electromagnetic organ new K-61" (PDF). Dairiki (Brochure) (in English and Italian). Castelfidardo (AN), Italy. 2006-03-27.
  38. ^ . BG's Musical Instruments (BGMI). 2008-03-03. Archived from the original on 2013-10-22.

clonewheel, organ, clonewheel, organ, electronic, musical, instrument, that, emulates, clones, sound, electromechanical, tonewheel, based, organs, formerly, manufactured, hammond, from, 1930s, 1970s, generate, sounds, using, solid, state, circuitry, computer, . A clonewheel organ is an electronic musical instrument that emulates or clones the sound of the electromechanical tonewheel based organs formerly manufactured by Hammond from the 1930s to the 1970s Clonewheel organs generate sounds using solid state circuitry or computer chips rather than with heavy mechanical tonewheels making clonewheel organs much lighter weight and smaller than vintage Hammonds and easier to transport to live performances and recording sessions The Hammond XB 2 recreates the sound of the vintage electromechanical Hammond organs in a much lighter smaller keyboard that uses electronic circuits to reproduce the sound of the spinning tonewheels The phrase clonewheel is a play on words in reference to how the original Hammond produces sound through tonewheels The first generation of clonewheel organs used synthesizer voices which were not able to accurately reproduce the Hammond sound In the 1990s and 2000s clonewheel organs began using digitally sampled real Hammond sounds or digital signal processing emulation techniques which were much better able to capture the nuances of the vintage Hammond sound citation needed Clonewheel organs can be either electronic keyboard based instruments such as the Korg CX 3 or the Roland VK 7 or keyboardless emulation devices which include MIDI compatible tone modules such as the E MU B 3 module and software based virtual synths such as the B4 by Native Instruments discontinued To use keyboardless emulation devices they need to be connected to a MIDI keyboard controller Contents 1 History 1 1 Original electromechanical Hammond 1 2 First clones 1 3 1990s and 2000s 2 Format 3 Instruments 3 1 Pre clonewheel organs 3 2 Early clonewheel organs 3 3 Major clonewheel organs 3 4 Electromagnetic tonewheel organs 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Original electromechanical Hammond edit nbsp Typical tonewheel organ and rotating speaker Hammond B3 amp Leslie nbsp Drawbars nbsp Tonewheel right rotates beneath electro magnetic pickup left Main article Hammond organ The Hammond organ is an electromechanical organ that was designed and built by Laurens Hammond in 1934 While the Hammond organ was originally sold to churches as a lower cost alternative to the pipe organ it came to be used for jazz blues and then to a greater extent in rock music in the 1960s and 1970s and gospel music The original Hammond organ imitated the function of a pipe organ s ranks of pipes in multiple registers by using additive synthesis of waveforms from harmonic series to generate its sounds The Hammond organ s individual waveforms were made by mechanical tonewheels which rotated beneath electromagnetic pickups The component waveforms can be mixed in varying ratios by using drawbars mounted above the two keyboards Hammond organs also have a harmonic percussion effect in which the 2nd and 3rd harmonic tones can be added to the attack envelope of a note Hammond organs have a distinctive percussive key click which is the attack transient that occurs when all nine key contacts close causing an audible pop or click Originally key click was considered to be a design defect and Hammond worked to eliminate or at least reduce it by using equalization filters However some performers liked the percussive effect and it has become part of the classic sound that modern imitators of the Hammond organ have tried to reproduce The classic way of enhancing the sound of a Hammond organ is to use a rotating speaker known as a Leslie speaker or cabinet First clones edit nbsp Korg CX 3 1980 According to journalist Gordon Reid it came close to emulating the true depth and passion of a vintage Hammond 1 Transporting the heavy Hammond organ bass pedalboard a B 3 organ bench and pedalboard weighs 425 pounds 193 kg and Leslie speaker cabinets to performance venues makes it cumbersome for artists to tour with a vintage electromechanical organ As well the Hammond as with all vintage electromechanical instruments faces the risk of technical problems with the tonewheels or electric motor which may be difficult to resolve in a touring situation As such there was a strong demand amongst musicians for a way of recreating the Hammond sound in a more portable reliable fashion Some early emulation devices from the 1970s were criticized for their unrealistic imitation of the Hammond sound particularly in the way the upper harmonics were voiced and in the simulation of the rotary Leslie speaker effect Refinements to Hammond emulations eventually led to the development of relatively light electronic keyboard instruments such as the Korg CX 3 1980 and the Roland VK 1 1980 which produced fairly realistic re creations of the Hammond tone While these instruments were widely used to replace the bulky Hammonds for band tours and club dates jazz and blues keyboardists still tended to use vintage Hammonds for recordings because the first clonewheel organs could not reproduce the tonal nuances of the old wooden Hammonds 1990s and 2000s edit nbsp The NordElectro2 reproduces the sound of the Hammond organ and several other electromechanical instruments Unlike most clonewheel instruments the Nord does not have sliding drawbars Instead the player presses buttons which light up a row of LEDs to indicate the drawbar setting By the 1990s and 2000s digital signal processing and sampling technologies allowed for better imitation of the original Hammond sound and a variety of electronic organs emulator devices and synthesizers provided an accurate reproduction of the Hammond tone such as the Kurzweil K2600 and Clavia Nord Electro keyboard Hammond Suzuki USA currently markets numerous home church and professional models that digitally reproduce the sound of vintage Hammond tonewheel organs Some sophisticated emulation devices have algorithms that recreate many of the nuances of vintage Hammonds such as the crosstalk or leakage between tonewheels the sound of dirty key contacts key click a growling tube amplifier and digital simulations of the rotating Leslie speaker cabinet nbsp Roland VK 7 1997 Even though the VK 7 recreates the Hammond sound using electronic circuits the instrument gives a nod to the traditional heritage of the Hammond by using a wooden case Currently there are numerous B 3 clones on the market which range from full size dual keyboard behemoths with real Leslie cabinets from Hammond Suzuki which can cost over 10 000 US to inexpensive Casio WK series home keyboards that have a digitally recreated tonewheel organ function which are available for less than 400 US In between are numerous keyboard based models from Hammond Korg Roland Clavia Nord Series rack mounted modules and software based virtual synths such as the B4 by Native Instruments which provide simulations of the B 3 sound There is even a model by the Pari E company which uses a modern version of the classic Hammond tonewheels not a digital simulation The use of Hammond clones and the merits of using clones versus the vintage electromechanical Hammond is the subject of lively debate amongst musicians The argument that digital simulations cannot recreate the complex interplay of variables that create the Hammond sound tonewheel leakage Leslie speaker rotation etc is supported by a review of clones in Keyboard Magazine The article entitled Clonewheel Heaven reviewed electronic simulations of the traditional Hammond sound and claimed that some aspects of the vintage electromechanical Hammonds sound are not accurately reproduced by clones and emulation devices 2 Nevertheless the increasing use of clonewheel organs on recordings by jazz and blues organ solo players is testimony to their sound and tone quality it is also worth noting the wide variety of tonal variations that exist even among genuine vintage tonewheel Hammond organs Owing to any number of causes not least of which are the age of its components and the amount of use a tonewheel organ has had variations in volume levels between tonewheels varying levels of key click and other tonal differences are more common than not Despite the widespread availability of relatively lower cost reliable digital clones and emulation devices and the near universal use of clones for band tours and club gigs many jazz blues and gospel keyboardists still have a strong interest in using vintage Hammond organs for studio recordings Even if a clone is able to accurately reproduce the vintage electromechanical Hammond sound several companies such as Clavia and Hammond Suzuki are making this claim citation needed performers still have an affection for the look feel characteristics and heritage embodied in the much heavier old wooden vintage instruments Format edit nbsp A WERSI OX7 organ sound module which includes drawbars Clonewheel organs are available in several formats The first is an integrated keyboard in which the keyboard and the circuitry that provides the tonewheel emulation is in the same chassis A second approach is a sound module a tabletop device which only provides the organ sounds it must be connected to a MIDI controller keyboard to be used The tabletop units vary in sophistication The least sophisticated units provide a selection of commonly used tonewheel sounds More sophisticated units may have drawbars and a number of knobs and buttons for controlling the sound The third format is as a virtual instrument which requires a computer and monitor The virtual instrument may depict the same types of controls that a real tonewheel organ would have on the monitor The musician then uses a computer mouse or other input to change the settings Instruments edit nbsp Vox Continental 1962 early 1970s Pre clonewheel organs edit Early drawbar organs inspired by HammondVox designed by JMI manufactured by JMI Thomas Eko and EME Continental Continental I 1962 c 1971 Continental II Super Continental 1966 1967 c 1972 Riviera 1966 c 1972 3 4 Yamaha A 3 1966 YC 10 1969 YC 20 YC 30 1970 YC 25D YC 45D 1972 5 6 Ace Tone TOP 1 1968 1969 TOP 6 c 1970 7 WLM Organ 1972 1984 made in Finland Hammond and related models nbsp Hammond X5 c 1974 1975 Ace Tone GT 5 GT 7 1971 predecessor of Hammond Sakata models Hammond manufactured by Sakata X 5 c 1974 1975 7 X 2 1978 8 B 200 Roland VK 9 VK 6 VK 09 c 1978 spin off from Ace Tone nbsp Elka X 50 clonewheel organ 1982 Italian drawbar organsFarfisa Professional Professional Duo early 70s VIP series 70s Professional 88 and 110 1977 78 and console models Maharani and Pergamon Crumar Haven Organizer Organizer2 Organizer T1 T2 Tokata portable models from 1976 to 1980 and consoles 203 204 205 2002 2003 Elka X50 1982 9 X55 X605 and X705 1977 1981 10 Solton Legend 1980s B 1000 c 1977 CRB Diamond 910M B 1000 s c 1981 11 etc Early clonewheel organs edit nbsp Korg BX 3 1980 Hammond B 3000 1976 1978 8 utilizing LSI for multiplexing etc 12 Korg CX 3 BX 3 1980 analog Roland VK 1 13 1980 analog Hammond manufactured by Suzuki Super B 1986 a first all digitally sampled organ from Hammond 14 Major clonewheel organs edit nbsp Hammond XB 3 1994 Hammond Suzuki XB 1 15 XB 2 1991 XB 5 1993 XB 3 1994 XC 3 1995 XM 1 XMc 1 1997 module 16 XM 2 XMc 2 2006 module XK 2 1999 XK 3 XLK 3 2004 17 XK 1 2006 XK 3c 2008 SK1 SK2 2011 18 and console models New B 3 2002 19 New B 3 mk2 and XH 272 Elegante Korg New CX 3 20 and New BX 3 21 2000 nbsp Clavia Nord C2D Combo Organ 2012 Clavia Nord Electro Series 2001 Nord Stage Series 2005 Nord C1 C2 C2D Combo Organ 2007 Nord Pedal Key 27 MIDI pedalboard Kurzweil K2500 K2600 PC2 PC2X PC3 PC3X PC3K PC3A KB3 mode modeled tone wheel Roland Rhodes VK 1000 Roland VK 7 22 VK 77 VK 8 23 VK 8m VK 88 VR 760 VR 730 and VR 09 V Combo 24 OthersBohm Emporio Casio CTK 691 900 7000 etc WK 3000 3200 3300 3700 3800 etc providing digital drawbar organ function Creamware B4000 Tonewheel synthesizer Diversi Musical Instruments DV Solo DV Duo DV Duo Plus Ferrofish B4000 E MU B 3 module nbsp KeyB DuoKeyB DLQ www keyborgan com KeyB Duo KeyB Solo KeyB Expander 25 Oberheim OB 3 26 OB 32 Oh Bee Three Squared module 27 and OB 5 Roland Atelier AT 900 AT 900c AT 800 Studiologic Numa Organ Tokai TX 5 28 Vermona Formation 1 2 3 and 3M Viscount DB 3 29 DB 5 Legend Live Solo Voce microB II V3 V5 V5 and Key5 Wersi Louvre Scala Verona Giga Piano a German company Yamaha Reface YC 2015 KeyboardPartner HX3 Hardware based physical model www keyboardpartner comSoftware There are also software emulations available GSi VB3 shareware VST plugin 30 note 1 Linplug Organ 3 previously known as daOrgan setBfree open source standalone or plugin 31 Native Instruments B4 B4 IIControllersHamichord M C3 powered by GSi VB3 Hamichord edition II 32 Hamichord had been distributed or produced by BG s Musical Instruments BGMI 33 note 2 then its successor model under Crumar brand has been introduced as following Crumar MOJO powered by GSi VB3 version II 34 note 3 35 Electromagnetic tonewheel organs edit PARI E K 61 2006 c 2010s an Italian made B 3 clone which uses an actual electromagnetic tonewheel generator albeit of modern plastic construction Also Leslie clones were made 36 37 38 note 2 33 See also editHammond organ Organ trioNotes edit As of 2010s the product line of Genuine Soundware and Instruments GSi founded by Guido Scognamiglio is distributed by V M Connection di Andrea Agnoletto V M Connection Quarto d Altino Italy About GSi Genuine Soundware and Instruments a b The origin of PARI E the Pari organ was a tonewheel organ produced by Anton Parie in Belgium in the early 1960s then the production of XT0 model was moved to Italy by Alfredo Gioielli around 1969 according to the HammondWiki Jeff Dairiki Geoffrey T Dairiki Pari Organs HammondWiki dairiki org The generator of Pari organs was created by Anton Parie who started production of an electromagnetic organ in Belgium in the early 60s Around 1969 production of XT0 model was moved to Italy by Alfredo Gioielli In 2005 Pari factory re opened with the name of PARI E the means pari electromagnetic starting the production of a new organ In the latter part of 2006 Pari started production of a new two manual organ the new K 61 and a portable version the K 61P For details of old Pari organ see Henning Hojen The Pari XT0 and Attack Organs Hammond Leslie info In the late 2000s Crumar brand have been acquired and revived by BG s Musical Instruments BGMI Castelfidardo Italy V M Connection di Andrea Agnoletto V M Connection Quarto d Altino Italy and as of 2010s the former BGMI s product line have been dealt by V M Connection References edit History amp References Hammond Zone Archived from the original on 2010 12 06 Retrieved 2010 12 05 officially supported by Hammond U K Reid Gordon Korg CX3 Sound on Sound No January 2001 Archived from the original on 18 February 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2013 Fortner Stephen Clonewheel Heaven Keyboard Magazine No November 2004 Vox Combo Organ Heaven Peterson David Denny Dick 1993 The Vox Story Guitar History series Vol 4 Bold Strummer ISBN 978 0 933224 70 4 Combo Organs that Strove to be More Expressive Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary Yamaha Corporation Archived from the original on 2015 07 13 Yamaha Combo Organ Heaven Note during the 1969 c 1970 Yamaha manufactured the Hammond V Series transistor organs including Cadette V 100 V 200 according to Da Hammond Encyclopedia a b Ace Tone Combo Organ Heaven Note in the mid 1970s their joint enterprise with Hammond called Nihon Hammond manufacture the several transistor Hammond organs in Japan and England including Cadette VS 300 after 1973 F1000 F2000 F3000 etc according to Da Hammond Encyclopedia a b Hammond Accomplishments 1970s Hammond Zone Archived from the original on 2010 12 08 Retrieved 2010 12 05 ELKA X 50 SonicState com Released 1982 Elka Unicord Combo Organ Heaven X 50 Hammond emulator X 705 Full set of Hammond clone drawbars with seven percussion settings a full drum machine that was quite impressive for the time and an 11 preset synth with sounds like guitar trombone clarinet and sax The synth sounds were polyphonic on the top manual and monophonic on the bottom and pedals Used by Jean Michael Jarre Made from 77 to 81 original price 2662 Thanks Les Others Solton Combo Organ Heaven ハモンドオルガンカンパニーがトーンホイールを生産中止した理由 Why did Hammond Organ Company stop manufacturing of the tone wheel organs ずばり ハモンド Frankly on Hammond in Japanese Hammond Suzuki 2007 08 08 archived from the original on 2007 10 12 In English In 1975 Hammond stop the operation of a tonewheel organ factory in Chicago after the manufacturing of last B 3 In 1976 Hammond released a new model B 3000 using a breakthrough mechanism multiplex system The model B 3000 released in the following year of B 3 s discontinuation was just a model on which Hammond engineers noticed the needs of reproduce of all elements on tonewheel organ Sam Inglis Roland VK 1 Drawbar Organ Retro Reviews Sound on Sound January 1999 Hammond Accomplishments 1980s Hammond Zone Archived from the original on 2010 12 15 Retrieved 2010 12 05 Nick Magnus Hammond XB 1 Sound on Sound October 1998 Nick Magnus Hammond XM 1 amp XMc 1 Organ Module amp Drawbar Controller Sound on Sound May 1997 Hammond XK 3 XLK 3 amp Leslie 2121 2101 Modelled Tonewheel Organ amp Rotary Speaker System Sound on Sound July 2005 Damien Albetto 2011 08 17 Hammond SK1 Instrument Review Muse Live Music Magazine Archived from the original on 2011 09 01 Hugh Robjohns Hammond New B3 Modelled Electromechanical Tonewheel Organ Reviews Sound on Sound July 2003 Archived from the original on 2006 11 06 Gordon Reid Korg CX 3 Modelling Tonewheel Organ Reviews Sound on Sound January 2001 Archived from the original on 2015 02 18 Retrieved 2011 05 16 Gordon Reid Korg BX 3 Organ Dual manual Modelled Combo Organ Reviews Sound on Sound August 2003 Nick Magnus Roland VK 7 Virtual Modelling Tonewheel Organ Reviews Sound on Sound July 1997 Gordon Reid Roland VK 8 Virtual Tonewheel Organ Reviews Sound on Sound September 2002 Archived from the original on 2014 03 22 Hugh Robjohns Roland VR760 Performance Keyboard Sound on Sound November 2003 KeyB Organ KeyB DLQ Andy Davies Oberheim Eclipse Electronic Piano amp OB3 Drawbar Organ Module Sound on Sound March 1996 Nick Magnus Oberheim Viscount OB3 squared Tonewheel Organ Module Reviews Sound on Sound September 1997 COMBO TX 5 CLASSIC in Portuguese Brazil Tokai archived from the original on 2016 03 16 retrieved 18 February 2016 O Tokai TX 5 O modelo combo inclui TX 5 Classic Lower pedaleira PD 2 movel todas estas pecas podem ser adquiridas separadamente See also About us Archived 2012 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Reid Viscount DB3 Viscount DB3 Digital Drawbar Organ Reviews Sound on Sound November 2002 VB3 The Ultimate Virtual Tonewheel Organ GSi Genuine Soundware and Instruments founded by Guido Scognamiglio x42 setBfree ToneWheel Organ x42 Plugins Retrieved 2019 09 11 Hamichord M C3 organ MIDI controller Castelfidardo AN Italy BG s Musical Instruments BGMI 2009 archived from the original on 2011 09 05 HAMICHORD M C3 ORGAN MIDI CONTROLLER In its full configuration Meaning M C3 Exp edition Hamichord has a PC running Microsoft Windows XP embedded that runs your favorite organ software The sound engine of Hamichord is a SPECIAL VERSION OF GSI VB3 called VB3 HAMICHORD EDITION II Note after the acquisition of CRUMAR by BGMI the same page can be found under the discontinued page on crumar it a b Bg S Srl Citta di Castelfidardo sito ufficiale City of Castelfidardo website Comune di Castelfidardo Bg s Musical Instruments have more than 40 years of History The Bg s Srl society was created in 2003 by Mr Mauro Baldassari and Mrs Maria Grazia Gioielli the daughter of Mr Alfredo Gioielli the father of the Italian Electromagnetic organ PARI originating from the generators created by Anton Parie in Belgium in the early 1960s The big experience of Mr Alfredo producer of organs from 1966 to 1982 The idea of re make an organ with genuine electromagnetic tonewheel generator was in our heart from many years and finally in 2003 we were able to do it this is the birth of the new K 61 electromagnetic organ together with our Rotary speakers cabinets With our growing range of product Hamichord Pari e Rotary GSI Crumar MOJO CRUMAR Quarto d Altino VE Italy V M Connection retrieved 18 February 2016 MOJO a compact portable lightweight elegant easy to use and affordable dual manual tonewheel organ simulation MOJO is powered by GSi VB3 Version II About us Crumar it V M Connection In 2008 V M Connection an Italian society active in development of musical instruments decided to renew the CRUMAR name and brand and started producing keyboards under this name PARIE New K 61 In alter Frische Tests OKEY in German No 74 January February 2007 PARI E electromagnetic organ new K 61 PDF Dairiki Brochure in English and Italian Castelfidardo AN Italy 2006 03 27 PARI E electromagnetic organ BG s Musical Instruments BGMI 2008 03 03 Archived from the original on 2013 10 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clonewheel organ amp oldid 1180368879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.