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#273836 - 10/16/09 03:35 PM
Re: Cable Organizer
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by Dnj: Don't get me wrong Ian...I have used pedals in the past many times especially before arrangers in my band years using multiple KBs...I am not a Piano player but a Singer first who accompanies my singing in many ways using Styles, SMF, Mp3, backing tracks. As a trained Accordion player at age 7 as a kid my technique is different. Yes, of course...the accordion. I played one for years, had an old Salanti 120 bass, and you're so right...didn't need a pedal...it was all technique, so I understand where you are coming from. I've also seen and heard you play an arranger, and you are a fine player...a total pro...or, as it's been said about others here on SZ, the real deal. I was mainly a piano player, started when I was 4, so the sustain pedal is very much a part of my technique.
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Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#273837 - 10/16/09 03:38 PM
Re: Cable Organizer
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14294
Loc: NW Florida
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Even for sounds that traditionally don't need a sustain (basically, anything OTHER than the pianos, E. Pianos, etc.), there is still, IMO, an enormous need for it on an arranger. So often, either your RH is needed to do things like change keyboard Parts, change Tones, hit transpose buttons, change from full to split modes, navigating to the next registration, etc., etc., or your LH likewise... How do you do this without what you are playing chopping off? A string line played 'held by hand' ties up your hand. Use the sustain, and now you can press a button, move a slider, etc.. Few of the instruments we try to emulate needed to do anything else other than just play. Arranger use (if you are actually playing much ) needs a lot of button input. Some way of holding a note while you press the buttons could come in VERY handy..! In the spirit of 'use everything you can' surely adding a sustain for when it can do something you can't do any other way is appropriate? (And damn! Hasn't everybody heard of TinyURL.com yet? ) [This message has been edited by Diki (edited 10-16-2009).]
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#273838 - 10/16/09 03:59 PM
Re: Cable Organizer
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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Originally posted by ianmcnll: Yes, of course...the accordion. I played one for years, had an old Salanti 120 bass, and you're so right...didn't need a pedal...it was all technique, so I understand where you are coming from.
I've also seen and heard you play an arranger, and you are a fine player...a total pro...or, as it's been said about others here on SZ, the real deal.
I was mainly a piano player, started when I was 4, so the sustain pedal is very much a part of my technique. Ian I understand how a sustain pedal is a crucial part of playing piano as trained also......when i accompany someone at a gig who wants to sing a song I usually go Octave Piano/Strings & Accmp Off because most cannot keep up with an arranger KB & I can better follow their horrible timing ... I just consider pedals of any kind just another players tool as is charts, lyrics etc etc .....some use them some don't no big deal. What matters is how you use what you have and how it sounds.
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#273839 - 10/16/09 04:20 PM
Re: Cable Organizer
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14294
Loc: NW Florida
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So... how does it sound? Got anything that is just you playing the piano, no sustain? I've been in situations on other people's rigs with no sustain, and sure, you can find SOMETHING that kind of works, but generally, it's so limited it barely qualifies as a piano part... (and I came from an accordion background, too. Doesn't mean I can't adapt) I'm afraid this is getting like someone saying you CAN play with just one finger (in either hand!). SURE you can... but is it as good as playing with five (in each hand)? I can play a melody with my nose Doesn't mean it SOUNDS any good, though I am surprised. This seems like such an arbitrary self imposed limitation to save you what, ONE insignificantly small piece of gear? I can understand trading away a 45 lbs. arranger, to save your back. But a sustain pedal (tablet style) weighs nothing, takes up no room, and adds enormously to your abilities. Or does it? [This message has been edited by Diki (edited 10-16-2009).]
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#273840 - 10/16/09 09:33 PM
Re: Cable Organizer
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/23/04
Posts: 2207
Loc: Dayton, OH USA
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I sat down and tried playing my Tyros without using a sustain pedal...
Can it be done? Absolutely. Depending on the kind of tune, you can get away with it. I'd say it comes to a style type thing...it must suit Donny's needs. In arranger mode, the style just vamps along...its not hard to make it work that way.
I do a lot of chording with both hands and use a fair amount of fills, instrument changes, modulations, etc. I would miss it if I didn't have it.
But, if you turn the accmp off and go to straight piano, uh, its extremely limiting. It basicially sounds like **** . This is probably why all quality pianos come with a sustain pedal.
Donny said he sometimes turns off the accmp. sometimes for guest singers and uses an octave piano/strings setting. I tried that too-trying to play full chords everything took on a Ferrante & Teischer (sp?) feel to it. Its cool, for a pass through-maybe a full song...if it was the right one...
ON a side note-I find it easier for guests singers to sing with the full arranger as they then get a solid drum beat and whatnot to assist them. Using just a piano with no sustain, uh...yuck....
But hey, Donny's comfortable with it so who cares, eh? He knows what he's doing...
------------------ Bill in Dayton
[This message has been edited by Bill in Dayton (edited 10-16-2009).]
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Bill in Dayton
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