Oh, don't get me started! I could talk all day about vintage keys. (Actually, I can write about them all day, too. A co-author and I will be publishing a book next year that's a tribute to the great rock keyboards of the 1950s through early 1980s. Large format, full of gorgeous studio photos and what we hope will be regarded as the authoritative story of these instruments.)
I used to play the Rhodes with a Small Stone phaser. But I'm not really into that '70s/'80s pop kind of sound. To me, tremolo is the defining Rhodes sound. Clavinets are being re-born because you can finally buy the "consumable" parts for them. (Strings, hammer tips, etc.) There was a long time when those parts were totally unavailable, and lots of Clavs got scrapped because their hammer tips had decayed into a gooey, stick mess. A real shame.
I'm not sure I know anyone who stretch tunes a Wurli. I'd say the overwhelming majority of Rhodes players do not stretch tune their pianos. Rhodes shipped them without stretch tuning, but at some point added a stretch tuning chart to the Rhodes service manual in case that was your preference. To me, a Rhodes sounds out of tune when it's stretch-tuned. But I might think differently if I were in a band in which I was playing a Rhodes along with an acoustic piano that's stretched. I'm told by a tech who works for Donald Fagen (Steely Dan) that Donald wants his stretch-tuned for that reason.
Alan
I used to play the Rhodes with a Small Stone phaser. But I'm not really into that '70s/'80s pop kind of sound. To me, tremolo is the defining Rhodes sound. Clavinets are being re-born because you can finally buy the "consumable" parts for them. (Strings, hammer tips, etc.) There was a long time when those parts were totally unavailable, and lots of Clavs got scrapped because their hammer tips had decayed into a gooey, stick mess. A real shame.
I'm not sure I know anyone who stretch tunes a Wurli. I'd say the overwhelming majority of Rhodes players do not stretch tune their pianos. Rhodes shipped them without stretch tuning, but at some point added a stretch tuning chart to the Rhodes service manual in case that was your preference. To me, a Rhodes sounds out of tune when it's stretch-tuned. But I might think differently if I were in a band in which I was playing a Rhodes along with an acoustic piano that's stretched. I'm told by a tech who works for Donald Fagen (Steely Dan) that Donald wants his stretch-tuned for that reason.
Alan
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