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Messages - melveyr

#1
The Fender Rhodes Electric Piano / Re: The Rhodes Mark 8
November 03, 2021, 01:31:54 PM
It's too expensive for me, but I think they will do well if the action is good. I like that they moved to a pull sustain pedal. I really find the sustain pedal on my Mark I to be clunky. With that said, what this REALLY makes me want to do is just invest a little more $$$ into my Mark I and get it playing a bit better  :)
#2
Pulled the trigger on a 'Joyo American Sound' pedal. It is meant to emulate a mic'd up 57 fender deluxe amp, but you can also get it sound like a twin reverb. It's cool because it's fully analog. No clue how they do that...

Here is a scooped mid tone from my rhodes (apologies drum machine might be mixed a tad loud for this!)
https://www.instagram.com/p/CH6iWaJnk0-/

Works great on the wurlitzer too, I just use the voice knob to give it more mids because I don't like the high end too much on my Wurli cause it can be a bit harsher than the rhodes.
#3
Have you given thought to taking the opportunity to chase a new tone? We have wurlitzer and rhodes, but i imagine different types of hammers striking new shapes could offer a world of new tones. Might be more fun than trying to recreate what has already been done.
#4
Quote from: bourniplus on November 12, 2020, 06:35:26 PM
You might try de-coupling the legs from the floor, with foam, felt or other similar soft material

Good idea... I'm actually researching techniques that e-drum users use because even those are 'silent' they send vibrations through the floor. They use tennis ball platforms or mattresses with a wooden platform on top to isolate. I will report back to the group if i have any success!

#5
I moved into a really old building with paper thin walls and floors. I have been playing the Wurli direct out of consideration for others, but that is still too much for them. She said she can hear the notes even tho im not amped!

Has anyone encountered this problem before? Should I wrap the wurli in a lead blanket?!

-Ryan
#6
Has anyone tried the Joyo American Sound pedal? Demos for guitar seem pretty good. It does a simulation of a 57 deluxe.
#7
I really like the sound of my Wurlitzer through a mic'd up amp, but i moved to a new apartment where I can't make any noise so am back to recording direct! Has anyone experimented with the different mic / cab emulators on the market for guitars and applied them to Rhodes/Wurli? Examples are the strymon iridium, ox top box, boss waza, helix... Would appreciate any thoughts before dropping the dough on one $$$
#8
I've had similar sounds before. There is likely some small piece of debris stuck on the pick ups, probably so small that you can't even see it. I would thoroughly vacuum the instrument, especially around the pick ups. Also to help pinpoint where the sound is coming from you can blow some air (Even just thru a straw) at different parts of the pick ups, and you might even be able to just dislodge it that way.
#9
I recently bought a Moog Grandmother off craigslist, mostly for bass lines, but it actually has an instrument input. I have been plugging my Wurlitzer into this and then using the Moog's high pass filter to remove some of the low end, then using the main filter to add resonance and tame some of the high end of my Wurlitzer which is voiced to have a good amount of bark. I also enjoy doing really slow and subtle filter sweeps with the LFO to add some movement to the tone. The Moog also has spring reverb on it which sounds nice on the Wurlitzer. This combination makes it really easy to just plug in and record direct without warming up my tube amp and annoying people around me! I usually leave the synth in 'drone' mode so that the Wurlitzer is always flowing through, but another interesting option is to to leave it envelope mode, so that the Wurlitzer signal only comes through when you play a note on the synth. You can get really cool synthy chord stabs this way, but live!

Here are some videos to demonstrate...

Chord stabs with rhodes/moog:
https://www.instagram.com/p/CCd2ox4neyy/

Wurlitzer through moog on drone mode:
https://www.instagram.com/p/CCmqwlMHlLe/
https://www.instagram.com/p/CCfRJlYnwb1/




#10
Just to chime in, I recently bought my first rhodes and it had bumps installed but also still had the felt on the hammers. The action was so heavy it felt like i was doing push ups playing chords. I took off the felt off the hammers tonight and now the action is SO light. I think the felt from the hammers can catch against the bump. It's a truly terrible combination.
#11
Super cool! What was the hardest part about coming up with this? Also how do you get the signal electrified? What kind of pickups do you use?
#12
Nice free FX for when recording. So if you have the kind of microphone that you can hang over your amp (like a sennheiser) then use that, then placing a metal mixing bowl (rounder is better) over the microphone then put a blanket over the amp. This does a couple of things

1) something about the metal mixing bowl with the mic inside of it focuses the tone more, reducing muddiness. for my wurlitzer it brings out the nasal/plucky parts of the tone that almost remind me of banjo. maybe it's a phasing thing

2) when you get the wurlitzer to bark it pushes a lot of air through the amp and you get almost like a plate reverb affect because the metal bowl will vibrate

3) removes any bad room sound

4) allows you to crank your amp a bit louder without bothering people  ;D

try it out! especially for wurli!
#13
Sounds pretty cool! Sounds like a blend of a Wurli and a Rhodes. The portability seems like the biggest selling point. I did notice that the tone seems less "full" than either my Wurlitzer or my Rhodes, but maybe that is how they did the mix because it definitely sits really well in the mix for their demo video. I would need to see a demo video of it soloed and with more bottom end.
#14
Excellent playing! Pedals sound great too.  ;D
#15
Hey y'all

I love pitch vibrato, a lot. I wanted to get a Boss VB-2 but those are super expensive. I ended up getting the TC Electronic one instead and am pretty happy with it. If I could make one tweak to it I wish I could dial in a SUPER slow rate, the slowest rate is a bit too fast. However, I really like how fast it can go. When I dial in a really fast rate and a shallow depth I feel like it makes the Rhodes sound almost like a bird singing, like its chirping or something. Here is a clip of me playing with a very fast rate:
https://www.instagram.com/p/B7pNu2UHkug/

#16
i got the 808. i love it except for it will occasionally skip playing a note in the sequence. if they fix that it's a winner
#17
Just bought the Peterson tuner app because I think it's higher quality than what I was using before. My bass section is within +/- one cent but then the keyboard gets progressively sharper as it moves up. The treble is around 4-5 cents sharp. I think it's great to shoot for zeros, but I think its more important that the sections of the keyboard match and if there is a bias towards the treble section be slightly sharper, or the bass slightly flatter than can sound nice and also make your work easier depending on how the current state of tuning. When I got my Wurlitzer the whole thing was sharp so I just focused on the bass/middle section. I don't mind a slightly sharper treble.
#19
Glad you found it helpful  :D I also have a vibrato pedal from Fairfield called the "Shallow Waters" which is cool because it has bucket brigades and also has a randomness to the modulation that keeps things interesting. You can also jack the rate up so high that you don't hear the pitch bend but it adds a type shivering quality to the sound. I'll make a video!

I haven't had the chance to try a compression pedal that has all the parameters like your Behringer one... Will have to add that to my list lol  8)
#20
I think this is a rhodes, not a wurlitzer. Wurlitzer doesn't have this amount of sustain, and you can also tell its a rhode because its very "burpy" attack.
#21
Hey y'all,

I was thinking of buying a synth bass to play along with my Wurlitzer. What are some of your favorites for pairing with Rhodes/Wurlitzer?
#22
I was using a dynacomp for a while, but really didn't like what it did to my transients. Made the keyboard "feel" weird too. I recently picked up an "accountant" compressor by fairfield circuitry. It's definitely not transparent, and when its really working its adding some distortion. But the benefit of this is that it doesn't feel weird to play the same way a dynacomp would.

Here is a little recording I did with some pretty heavy compression.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B6OmGelnEkp/

Anyways I thought it help anyone who was exploring guitar pedals for compression  :D
#23
I haven't done comparisons to a lot of other pedals, but I have the Dan Electro chorus pedal for my Wurli. It's 14 bucks on Amazon and has rate, depth, and mix knobs  :D I'm not an expert but it sounds like supertramp when I turn it on  8)
#24
Any update? Would love to learn more about this...
#25
Amps, Effects & Recording Techniques / Re: JC-40?
August 03, 2019, 08:14:47 AM
Got to try it out on a digital nord keyboard yesterday. Don't know if it was the samples but it sounded harsh / cold. Wasn't able to try a 120 but the JC40 seems like a no go.
#26
Amps, Effects & Recording Techniques / JC-40?
August 02, 2019, 03:14:29 PM
Hi everyone,

I'm new to electric pianos, and a recent owner of a Wurlitzer 200A. There is a lot of talk about how the JC-120 is a great pairing for electric piano, but I can't find anything about the new JC-40 (2x10). I'm drawn to it because I'm looking for something clean, with headphone jack, and a line out (so that I can color DI if doing a late night session). I won't gig with this thing. My landlord lives above so I can't have them hate me!

Are the 10 inch speakers a deal breaker? Is that why it gets no love on this forum? I like playing R&B / neo-soul chords so I normally like to EQ out my low end so that I can play clustered voicings. Does that make having 12 inch speakers less relevant? Thank you!