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Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
Thanks Mike, I too had to think for a while before buying one of these. Most of the sounds it creates are of little use to me. I just wanted the organ simulator.
I've always liked the organ effect on steel guitar. Back in the '70s I had a "Fender Leslie" cabinet. I used it along with my regular amp... a footswitch would direct the signal to either the steel amp or the Leslie. It was an awesome sound, but I soon grew tired of hauling the Leslie around.
I've always liked the organ effect on steel guitar. Back in the '70s I had a "Fender Leslie" cabinet. I used it along with my regular amp... a footswitch would direct the signal to either the steel amp or the Leslie. It was an awesome sound, but I soon grew tired of hauling the Leslie around.
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
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Thanks Jim, but I can't give away All of my secrets! Here's how I make the picture link... go to the youtube video, pause the video, and press Control/PrintScreen. Then I paste the image to a photo program, crop it, reduce the size and store it on the desktop. To see how to set up the html in the Forum text box, go to my opening post and click on Edit. It's just that simple!
- Joachim Kettner
- Posts: 7523
- Joined: 14 Apr 2009 1:57 pm
- Location: Germany
Sounds very good, thanks for the information about the gadget.
Last edited by Joachim Kettner on 6 Jul 2011 10:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
Fender Kingman, Sierra Crown D-10, Evans Amplifier, Soup Cube.
- Steve English
- Posts: 1403
- Joined: 20 Dec 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Baja, Arizona
This was the one I used back in the Rusty Young glory days of Poco:
If you can find one, they are the cat's meow....mostly because the speeds actually ramp up and down when selected, just like the real deal. Very fat sounding too.
I wired a small radio Shack project box with 4 switches and mounted it right behind the changer so I could switch it easily with my little finger.
Very realistic....
If you can find one, they are the cat's meow....mostly because the speeds actually ramp up and down when selected, just like the real deal. Very fat sounding too.
I wired a small radio Shack project box with 4 switches and mounted it right behind the changer so I could switch it easily with my little finger.
Very realistic....
- Greg Cutshaw
- Posts: 6610
- Joined: 17 Nov 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Corry, PA, USA
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Nice video Doug! Here's my page on the Pog2 alone and with the Line 6 Roto-Machine. I just got a used original design H&K Rotoshere and I'll be putting up a page soon for that combo.
http://www.gregcutshaw.com/Pog2/Pog2.html
Greg
http://www.gregcutshaw.com/Pog2/Pog2.html
Greg
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
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Thanks Greg, your audio clips are what convinced me to buy the POG2! Great stuff. I bought a H&K Rotosphere II a few years ago, but It sounded noisy to me. I just couldn't warm up to it for some reason. I'm going to keep experimenting with the POG. There is a setting listed on line for a Hammond B3 sound, but it isn't as realistic as the church organ sound IMO. Cheers.
- Brad Sarno
- Posts: 4916
- Joined: 18 Dec 2000 1:01 am
- Location: St. Louis, MO USA
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First time I heard this approach was a couple years ago. St. Louis steel player, Scott Swartz, had the POG into a leslie simulator kind of like Greg's demo. Doug, I like how you minimize the vibrato and glissando and find organ-like chord voicings. Scott pointed out how if you play the steel like an organ thru these two effects, it's uncanny, purely convincing B3 on pedal steel.
So many of us have tried to get an organ sound with just the Leslie simulators alone, but that just gets the guitar/leslie effect. The POG is the secret weapon. It's how you get the drawbar overtones so each string is like a set of adjustable-level Hammond tonewheels. Polyphonic Octave Generator!!! This ain't your grandpa's octave pedal. It deciphers chords and does a pretty good job of it. POG into Leslie sim, wow...
B
So many of us have tried to get an organ sound with just the Leslie simulators alone, but that just gets the guitar/leslie effect. The POG is the secret weapon. It's how you get the drawbar overtones so each string is like a set of adjustable-level Hammond tonewheels. Polyphonic Octave Generator!!! This ain't your grandpa's octave pedal. It deciphers chords and does a pretty good job of it. POG into Leslie sim, wow...
B
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- Posts: 550
- Joined: 6 Oct 2006 12:01 am
- Location: Santa Clarita, CA (originally U.K.)
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- Joined: 16 Jan 2008 8:20 am
- Location: Durham, NC
- mike nolan
- Posts: 1255
- Joined: 10 May 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Forest Hills, NY USA
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- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
Thanks guys. Mike, I put the POG before the volume pedal. Effects that modulate or overdrive I usually patch into directly from the steel guitar. Any reverbs or delays I put after the volume pedal. That's what works for me anyway.
Brad, I agree that minimal use of the pedals and avoiding slides helps to create an organ-like sound. What seems to work best is just picking a chord and letting the POG do the work.
Brad, I agree that minimal use of the pedals and avoiding slides helps to create an organ-like sound. What seems to work best is just picking a chord and letting the POG do the work.
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
In answer to a couple of inquiries:
The POG2 produces two octaves Below the original note(s) and two octaves Above the original note(s). So five octaves may be heard in all (including the original sound).
There are sliders to control the output level of each octave. There is also a slider to Detune the upper two octaves, and a couple of other effect sliders.
In the video I'm using four octaves (including the original sound).
* a small amount of the original sound
* none of the -2 octave
* about 60% of the -1 octave
* about 60% of the +1 octave
* about 50% of the +2 octave
* 100% "detune"
Those are the approximate settings suggested on the electro-harmonix web site.
The POG2 produces two octaves Below the original note(s) and two octaves Above the original note(s). So five octaves may be heard in all (including the original sound).
There are sliders to control the output level of each octave. There is also a slider to Detune the upper two octaves, and a couple of other effect sliders.
In the video I'm using four octaves (including the original sound).
* a small amount of the original sound
* none of the -2 octave
* about 60% of the -1 octave
* about 60% of the +1 octave
* about 50% of the +2 octave
* 100% "detune"
Those are the approximate settings suggested on the electro-harmonix web site.
- Rich Gibson
- Posts: 529
- Joined: 12 Mar 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Pittsburgh Pa.
- Contact:
I didn't have room on my pedalboard for the POG2 but recently road tested a micro POG in front of my Line6 Roto-Machine and am very pleased with the result.I got a big thumbs up from the soundmen at 2 gigs this past saturday,one outdoor and one indoor.
I'm not crazy about the sound demos of the POG2 by itself.To me a bit too Rock of Ages clean but in front of a leslie sim it's pretty cool.As noted you do have adjust your playing accordingly.
Just my experience of course and Thanks to Greg and Doug for taking the time to post very helpfull and informative samples.
I'm not crazy about the sound demos of the POG2 by itself.To me a bit too Rock of Ages clean but in front of a leslie sim it's pretty cool.As noted you do have adjust your playing accordingly.
Just my experience of course and Thanks to Greg and Doug for taking the time to post very helpfull and informative samples.
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- Posts: 95
- Joined: 6 Feb 2010 4:23 pm
- Location: Perkasie Pennsylvania USA
I've been doing some research on Leslie simulation products, and although I haven't purchased anything, I'm leaning towards this unit.
http://neo-instruments.de/de/ventilator ... r-features
I like the fact that you can set your speed up and slow down rates. check out the clips.
http://neo-instruments.de/de/ventilator ... r-features
I like the fact that you can set your speed up and slow down rates. check out the clips.
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
- Greg Cutshaw
- Posts: 6610
- Joined: 17 Nov 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Corry, PA, USA
- Contact:
The Leslie 3300 is $2400 new and there's a used one with a road case on ebay now. From the reviews I've read it's somewhat better than the Motion Sound 145T. If Leslie is a big thing to you, pay the $2400 and you've got the best for life, no trade-offs, no buyer remorse and no future upgrades. It's biamped at 80/300 watts RMS.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfdcAnHYH18
Greg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfdcAnHYH18
Greg
I don't know anything about this unit, but here's the page in English: http://www.neo-instruments.de/en/ventil ... r-featuresRich Santucci wrote:I've been doing some research on Leslie simulation products, and although I haven't purchased anything, I'm leaning towards this unit.
http://neo-instruments.de/de/ventilator ... r-features
I like the fact that you can set your speed up and slow down rates. check out the clips.
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- Posts: 2666
- Joined: 16 Dec 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Kansas City