Hi all! Thanks for putting this up, Ken. I've been looking for something like this for my own website. I've now included a link. If anyone is interested, after having a lot of requests from the hordes of the unwashed (mellotronistically speaking), as to what these darn things sound like, I've also put up an MP3 of a band I used to play with in the mid-70s (Devotion). It's from a demo we did in '74, and while it is entirely atypical from the band's usual repertoire (I mean, we're talking light years away!), it does have some very nice mellotron on it, if I do say so myself. See if you can find the mellotron flute among the real ones. There's also 3 violins and mixed choir. This is indeed my SFX console (I've had it almost 30 YEARS?!!). We traded my original 400 for a drummer we really coveted whom another Toronto band had at the time. That band eventually turned into Saga, so he probably got the short end of the stick... Check out http://rickblechta.com and look for "Mellotrons" under the music tab in the top navigation bar. As for rounding off the pinch rollers (Martinizing), I have to say that it does work a treat. I did it after the mishap at Tronto MkII and haven't had any further trouble -- although I never pressed keys down anything but straight which probably accounts for the problem not arising before MkII. And that's an important point that usually isn't discussed. If you want the very best sound and even tracking, your playing technique must be such that you depress the keys straight down. There is enough play between them (and they have been known to warp, too), so that the pressure from the pinch roller and pressure pad can become rather uneven. Have trouble with fidelity on the outside tracks? This could be the reason. I, too, can attest to the stability of the Streetly motor control card. My mellotron has never been more stable. And it went in easier than you can imagine -- mainly because it was JB himself who put it in at Tronto MkII. I merely had to bring him tea when he asked. So civilized, these Brits... Rick On Thursday, October 16, 2003, at 02:01 PM, kenmerb@... wrote: > OK, I've been waiting for a good time to show everyone something I > found on the internet, so here it is. It's a demonstration of the > operation of a single note of a mellotron, complete with moving > graphics and sound. And it's interactive. Just click on the > mellotron key to play the note, and you'll see what happens > mechanically inside a mellotron to make the sound play. Here's the > link: > > http://www.keyboardmuseum.org/v_teach/mellotron.html > > Most of you probably know how this works, but it is a good visual. > > And, in case someone asks what's to gain by "rounding" the edges of > your pinch rollers, this will help show you. By rounding the edges, > the rollers tend to drive the tape in a straighter path, reducing the > chance that it will go off to the side and wrap around the roller, as > happened to Rick's SFX machine at 'Tronto II (hi Frank ;-). This is > usually only done on pinch rollers that have gone hard and are > somewhat concave, causing the problem. If yours are like that, or if > you've had trouble with tape wrapping around the pinch rollers, > rounding the edges could be a solution.
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Re: [Mellotronists] Mellotron Demo
2003-10-17 by Rick Blechta
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