Reminiscing on Donald J. Leslie/Leslie Speakers
2004-09-15 by mellotrongirl
I appreciate hearing the news about Leslie, Mr. Thompson. A guy who pioneered a great invention that produces a great sound...right up there with the great unique sounds that will drop you to your knees or at least pique the interest of a critical listener, like Orchestrons, Mellotrons, Theremins, Optigans, B-3's that I can pick out no matter how deep in the recording mix they are. Y'know--it's kind of like when your ears start ringing...it sort of pre-occupies you for a bit. I find it interesting that the Hammond company early on looked to Leslie speakers as a tampering of their sound instead of a compliment to it. Then again, Laurens Hammond himself was not even a musician/player. When the first plug-in Hammonds came out, they couldn't even be officially classified as an "organ", since forced air wasn't sent through resonant pipes. The article Thompson linked us to mentions the great Joey DeFrancesco, IMHO the greatest B-3 player out there these days. He did a great collaboration a few years ago on Concord with Jimmy Smith called "Incredible" live in San Francisco. I thought these two great players would snuf each other out, but the marriage was perfect. The great highlight was active Leslie action; something Smith isn't famous for. On eBay, it's quite difficult to find a Leslie sold alone without a B-3 or comparable keyboard. They just go together like bread & butter.