|
|
|
|
|
|
#41124 - 04/10/02 01:10 AM
Re: The Good Old Days
|
Member
Registered: 12/16/99
Posts: 126
Loc: Torshalla, Sweden
|
Hi Bud Good to hear about your nostalgic thoughts. The Moserite guitar had maybe been a rarity now. We should never sold such things. I still have my old Strat from the 60:s, and also some soundpedals. Heard about Electro-Harmonix? I have one from the late 60:s, same kind of pedal were used by Jimi Hendrix.
So we maybe should keep our old Technics keyboards? The first playabel synth I´ve heard, was a Davioli, from 1972. The sound was very like barbed wire. 1975 I had an ARP synth, not polyphonic, but very good sound. But I really missing my old Fender Tremolux Amp from 1962. However, the good old days never comes back, but it´s nice to talk and remember this days. Well, have a nice day in ´Hendersonville... Lindoz
_________________________
Lindoz
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#41125 - 04/10/02 02:58 AM
Re: The Good Old Days
|
Member
Registered: 01/17/02
Posts: 403
Loc: United Kingdom
|
Hi Bud, Mike, and Lindoz,
Yes! It is neat to reminisce, especially about musical instruments and accessories. I think it is quite appropriate, Bud, to raise the subject of old instruments and memories on this forum. Lindoz, you mentioned the Electro-Harmonix line of accessories. I had the Small Stone phaser and Electric Mistress in addition to others, the names of which I have forgotten. Also had MXR flanger and analog delay units. I still have an ARP Quartet polyphonic synth (8-note polyphonic. Also have a Fender Precision Bass guitar and an Ibanez electric (Les Paul copy) guitar. Do any of you remember the TEAC Portastudio 144/244 multi-track cassette format tape recorders. I sold my 144, but still have the 244. Speaking of reverb units, Bud, I still have a Roland reverb that also has echo, and a sound on sound feature using a built-in tape unit. I have a few other "old" bits and pieces. All of the equipment is stored in cases or boxes. I guess the electronic stuff still works. Haven't plugged them in for many years. I, for one, do remember the Epiphone line of guitars. Mike, you are right about spring reverbs making a racket when dropped. I had a guitar amp with a spring reverb and sometimes I would stumble over it amid all the cables and kits and it would make a heck of a racket! Great memories!!! Incidentally, I gave all my Electro-Harmonix and MXR affects units to a young guitar player and he was tickled to death to have them. I can still hear the Electric Mistress because I used it when I recorded the Bee Gee tune "The Air That I Breathe" using the TEAC Portastudio. I wouldn't part with that tape. Guess I've rambled on long enough guys. It was nice to get up this morning and find this subject on our forum. Thanks, Bud.
Chuck
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#41126 - 04/10/02 05:19 AM
Re: The Good Old Days
|
Senior Member
Registered: 01/17/02
Posts: 3319
|
Hi Bud, the Gibson Epiphones are still going strong, and are a popular range of guitars here. I don't know what your Danelectro sound was like, but just recently I went mad with one reverb: initialise select guitar / bright solid guitar switch r1/r2 octave to -1 press and hold reverb, page 2, select live stage take total depth to 110 press detail edit reverb time 60 high damp 24 volume 100 volume (v) 120 there's still room to manouvre left, but it can get unplayable! When I could not afford the spring reverb units, I made one. The transistors were relatively cheap, the main expense was getting the spring box. These were made in various sizes, the bigger the better, and I could only afford the smallest 8 inch one. It worked, but don't ask me what the quality was like! Yes, Mike, the springs and units had to be mounted on rubber decoupling mounts, and if you tapped or kicked it by mistake your speaker cones could go flying across the room Lindoz, we had an ARP synth that belonged to the university, in the acoustics department. It was the maximum of cool, and was guarded jealously. Don't mention cassettes, Chuck, I always hated them, there was just no way to improve the quality no matter how many dolbys or dbxs you tried. Now my old Revox, that was a recording machine... I was stunned with my first DAT machine just how good it was compared to analogue recording. Do you remember the Yamahas that could dump the memory data in real time onto cassette tape, like the first computers? I once did a magnum opus that lasted 10 minutes, and took 11 minutes to load the sequencer data from cassette!!! Even more helpful was when you had the inevitable data corruption 9 minutes into the tape, that used to make your entire day! Then there was the Yamaha "mini disk" recorders, which used a floppy disk about half the size of the 3 1/2 inch floppy disks. You could only record one track at a time, so endlessly overdubbed, but with the 8 note polyphony available then, you did not do that much overdubbing! Another format which bombed without trace. I then bought a KN800 with disk drive. Then I needed a graphic equaliser for the music room, then a reverb unit for microphone input, then a noise gate for silence between tracks, then a compressor for making tapes. All these boxes now useless, redundant and worthless as each new keyboard had more and more features inside turning it more and more into a complete workstation. I suppose if I get a 7000 the USB soundcard will be redundant too. Well, I suppose that's progress, Folks
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#41128 - 04/10/02 10:06 AM
Re: The Good Old Days
|
Member
Registered: 01/17/02
Posts: 480
Loc: The Plantation, Leesburg, Flor...
|
Now we have the old timers thinking back!! I suppose some of the younger readers will wonder if our minds are wandering too far from reality, but if they're lucky, they too will have glorious memories to share one day. The Danelectro reverb unit had one tube and was very noisy, but it also had spring metal feet and wasn't as prone to accidental noise as was the Fender Twin Reverb amp my brother and I bought. Now, that unit would "boinggggg" your eardrums numb, and it still sits in my brother's basement. When the reverb part went out, we had to rewire around the unit just to be able to use the amp. That's back when amps actually came with schematics! I also bought a six string, short neck, bass guitar that I can't remember the brand name of, but someone else liked it more than I did and took it home with them. Haven't seen one since 1963. However, I still have the Kustom bass amp that loves to gather dust and is probably worth more than I would want to pay today. I would be willing to trade it for a kn7k, though! Still, it is worthwhile to pass some of these useless items on to budding musicians and watch them enjoy some of the "things" that enriched our lives at one time, and it also gives them some insight into how things used to be - before computerized components. Lindoz, I took my Mosrite guitar in for switch repairs and the fellow that owned the shop traded me a brand new Rickenbocker 610MG for it. The fast action neck on the Mosrite was so thin it was subject to serious warping and was hard to keep in tune, but it was fun to play! The thing weighed a ton, too. Once in a while I take the Ric out to look at it and sigh. [This message has been edited by Bud Whipple (edited 04-10-2002).]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|