Korg in no way endorses this emulation.
Korg, Mono/Poly, Poly-6, MS-20, Vox and Continental are all registered names or trademarks of Korg Inc of Japan. This emulates the original mark-1 Continental, popular in its time with the Animals on 'House of the Rising Sun', Doors on 'Light my Fire' and most of their other tracks. Manzarek did use Farfisa later, and even played with the Hammond on their final album, 'LA Woman', but this organ in part defined the 60's sound and is still used by retro bands for that fact. The Damned used it in an early revival where Captain Sensible punched the keyboard wearing gloves to quite good effect. After that The Specials began the Mod/Ska revival using one. The sharp and strong harmonic content has the ability to cut into a mix and make its presence known. The organ was a british design, eventually sold (to Crumar?) and made into a number of plastic alternatives. Compared to the Hammond this was a fully electronic instrument, no moving parts, and much simpler. It had a very characteristic sound though, sharper and perhaps thinner but was far cheaper than its larger cousin. It used a master oscillator that was divided down to each harmonic for each key (as did the later Hammonds for price reasons). This oscillator division design was used in the first of the polyphonic synthesisers where the divided note was fead through individual envelope generators and a shared or individual filter (Polymoog et al). The Vox is also a drawbar instrument, but far simplified compared to the Hammond. It has 4 harmonic mixes, 16', 8' and 4' drawbars each with eight positions. The fourth gave a mix of 3rd and 5th. An additional two drawbars controlled the overall volume and waveforms, one for the flute or sine waves and another for the reed or ramp waves. The resulting sound could be soft and warm (flute) or sharp and rich (reed). There are two switches on the modulator panel, one for vibrato effect and one for memories and options. Options give access to an chorus effect rather than the simple vibrato, but this actually detracts from the qualities of the sound which are otherwise very true to the original. Sample #1: first memory, no vibrato. This was played from my laptop QWERTY so there are some clicks and faults. |
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Bristol is in no way associated with
the original manufacturer, neither do they endorse this product. Bristol is free software. Bristol carries no logo. |