The Clavia mellotron and Chamberlin libraries came from the "masters" at Mellotron Archives and many are not available on the "Pinder" disc. That's why I bought it- to have access to those previously unavailable samples. I do agree though that Markus' machine could be better than the Nord Wave. Still, it probably weighs alot more. > You did not have to buy the Clavia keyboard to get the Mellotron sounds. > You could buy the same samples and play them on a Motif or Fantom. And > with better fidelity and more tweakability than Clavia. > > Markus' machine will give you the feeling of playing a real mellotron with > a very similar playing experience using the same keyboard. Plus it looks > cool. > Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile > > -----Original Message----- > From: lsf5275@aol.com > Sender: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com > Date: Sun, 25 Jul 2010 14:17:20 > To: <newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com> > Reply-To: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com > Subject: Re: [newmellotrongroup] Re: New Digital Mellotron > > Well, that begs the question, if Streetly has the "protection masters," > then who has the MASTERS? If Markus has them and uses them to make the > sounds > for his new digital Mellotron sample player ( I refuse to call it the > M4000 or a Mellotron) and it uses 24 bit uncompressed samples from those > masters, it should sound OK I would think, and probably better than what's > offered by Clavia. > > I'm skeptical as to whether there will be a huge market for it. I am > curious to hear it, though I imagine it sounds great. I just wonder what > the > attraction is? If all of the same sounds are now offered by Clavia ( I > think > you can get them uncompressed now) and the Clavia machines can play those > samples and a jillion other sounds, then all you are buying is > cosmetics. > > I never thought there would be that big a market for the Memotron. I > wonder > how many of them have been sold. So if all of the bands/individuals that > ever wanted a stand alone Mellotron sample keyboard purchased a > Memotron... > or if even half of them did (hell, a fourth of them), how big is the > market > going to be for another digital Mellotron emulator? Are folks that have > Memotrons going to stick them in a closet or on eBay and then by Markus' > machine? I'm sure Markus' sample library and pricing will be vastly > superior to > the Memotron's, but still, is that going to be enough? There is no > question that everything he makes is first rate, and I'm sure the quality > will be > there, but are there going to be enough people that need that difference? > I > guess it really is attractive to all of the people that really would like > to have the real thing but don't have the money. However, at some point > you > will have substantially fulfilled that market and once those buyers have > the sample library, what else is there to sell to the customer base? > > It would be interesting to know how many people purchased a Clavia > keyboard just to get the Mellotron sounds. > > Frank > > > In a message dated 7/25/2010 10:37:03 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > tronbros@aol.com writes: > > We have Les's protection copies, one generation away from the MASTERS > (sing hallelujas) but we never use them. They are there as a valued > archive > and have no place in regular tape production or any simulation. > >
Message
Re: [newmellotrongroup] Re: New Digital Mellotron
2010-07-26 by Thomas C. Doncourt
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