I think they all fill different purposes....I started out the same way as you Gene with using Optigan discs in a Orchestron and then finally after looking for almost four years I got a hold of a Optigan 35011 in Germany...Oddly enough my band got a gig close enough in Wurzburg so I could pick it up in person which was great.... I use the loops as middle eight outro/intro stuff.....Tempo and pitch are the same so it can be a bit tricky unless you work with a computer...My favorite discs are the ones with really scratchy picking acoustic guitars....Lately I have been using the Organ lead sounds quite a lot. Apparently a lot of the Organs on Elvis Costellos Brutal Youth are supposed to be Optigan. The Orchestron is a lot more versatile as you can play it much like a really fast Mellotron. I have been using the vocal choirs and actually the Hammond B-3 disc a fair bit on stuff. The main thing is that Both the Orchestron and Optigan are really characteristic instruments almost more so than the Mellotron (....I´m ducking already....). They are instant moodsetters. And also just be flipping the discs upside down you have them playing backwards which is even more spooky.... Get one......but get one cheap...It´s bound to break down and for general purposes it´s pretty limited and an acquired taste but if you are into that kind of thing...It´s a lot easier to find one in the U.S than in Europe as only 200 were sold officially in Europe in Holland in 1974. // Mattias ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gene Stopp" <gene@...> To: <Mellotronists@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2003 10:41 PM Subject: RE: [Mellotronists] optigan recommendation? > The Orchestron on loan to me has a bunch of Optigan disks along with the > Orchestron disks. The Optigan disks don't map to the Orchestron keys in the > right sequence, but at least you can get a flavor of what an Optigan sounds > like. > > There are rhythm tracks and melody tracks. The s/n ratio is awful. I suppose > it depends on the condition of the disks. Very much like a phonograph, > except lower fidelity (much lower). Pops and clicks all over the place. > Think of a cartoon, where somebody goes up to a Victrola and puts the needle > down. You could use an Optigan for the cartoon's soundtrack. It's like a > caricature. > > The rhythms themselves fall into the "cheesy lounge music of the early > sixties" category. We were such nerds back then. Now that it's 40 years > later it's cool again. I kind of like it too. > > - Gene > > -----Original Message----- > From: Michael Peters [mailto:mpeters@...] > Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2003 1:10 AM > To: Mellotronists@yahoogroups.com > Subject: [Mellotronists] optigan recommendation? > > > "Optigan - the poor man's mellotron" - there's one currently on Ebay and I'm > wondering if it's worth it. What do you think? They say that an Optigan is > basically a toy and sounds crappy. Does it? The only thing I ever really > heard played on an Optigan was Steve Hackett's piece 'Sentimental > Institution'. I kind of liked that sound and it didn't sound very crappy. > > > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > Mellotronists-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > > >
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Re: [Mellotronists] optigan recommendation?
2003-08-08 by Mattias Olsson
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