xk49w wrote:skyboltone wrote:A clipped M3 weighs less than 200 pounds and when rebuilt with mylar or pvc caps is agressive and complete.
But has no foldback, doesn't have 61 keys per manual, and is missing some drawbars and pedals. Still, A Whiter Shade of Pale was done on an M as the story goes.
I can still get Ms free for the taking especially if they've been stored out on someone's porch and they look like ass. Good luck findin' a free B. (The original Freebie?!

) I have a couple well connected buddies who get 'em fer free once or twice a year, it's a matter of bein' in the loop and bein' there wif a truck at a moment's notice. Nuffin' illegal or underhanded, one just needs to recognize opportunity before the window of opportunity slams shut.
It's more common for old Ms to go out for a couple hundred bucks, Bs start at 2.5k and go outta sight from there. $5k is middlin' fer a B.
In terms of commitment it's easier to talk a guitar player into a low buck M instead of a high dollar B.
xk49w wrote:skyboltone wrote:Oh, and don't forget the Leslie. There are only about 200,000 122 leslies ever built and they are rare as hen's teeth because idiots tear out the amps for some kind of vintage sound horseshit.
Only cheap ones are rare. You can still buy a new 122A today with the 40 Watt tube amp. Expensive though ($2500?). The old ones are better.
The old ones are better? Ya think?!!
It's the same old shit, we can go out and buy a "reissue Marshall" or a "reissue Fender", the punters lap 'em up and smile because they
look like the real thing and they don't know any better. I know what the real thing looks like inside where it counts and more to the point I know what the real thing sounds like.
I'll bet part of the market for vintage Leslie amps is to retrofit "reissue" 122s.
"Expensive"?! Try to build one.
xk49w wrote:People don't tear the amp out for some kind of vintage sound horseshit, they tear them out because 40 Watts isn't enough power to compete on stage with any guitar amp driven into distortion. Serious power and upgraded drivers are the order of the day. The organ player I play with uses two 122s, 1200 Watts, active crossover, some kind of JBL (2225s?) and Altec 290 "Giant Voice" horn drivers. It sounds glorious.
Maybe I'm just a dumb-ass guitar player but that makes zero sense to me. Yeah, I get it. I get that organ players succomb to the "mine is bigger than yours is" thing and yeah, a gutted bi-amped Leslie is Viagra for keyboards. But you give up that nasty gnarly overdriven Leslie tone. This ain't no Church, this is Rock 'n' Roll. If it don't grind leave it on the truck. It's just a frickin' travesty to do that to a 122. Start wif a 770 and have yer way wif it.
xk49w wrote:Hammond invented a true pitch-shifting vibrato and chorus in response to the effect of the Leslie speaker. "You won't need a Leslie now because Hammonds have Electronic Vibrato." The Leslie still sounded better. Take a look at that chorus/vibrato circuit if you want to see something inspired.
Necessity is one muther of an invention!
I wish we'd all get with the program when it comes to conservin' rock 'n' roll. There are certain iconic tones that only happen one way in reality. Sure, we can sample 'em and model 'em all day and all night but the real thing is still th' real thing. Ya got yer Strats, yer Les Pauls, yer Marshalls and the like... then of course boutique rarities like Wrecks and Dumbles. Comes the day we're gonna feel as stupid about hackin' up tubes 'n' wheels as we do about '50s Strats wif big ol' splintery aftermarket routes and changed parts.
Save the baby seals! erm... Save the Baby wheels!

umm... Save the Baby B's!
Now that I got a cause... do I get to bang hippy chicks?!
