Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Twin Keyboard Mellotron Mark V, Mellotron M.400 The Cinema Show/Aisle of Plenty: Genesis Selling England by the Pound: 1973 Tony Banks M400 Cirkus King Crimson: Lizard: 1970 Robert Fripp: MkII Clocks – The Angel of Mons Steve Hackett: Spectral Mornings: 1979 Nick Magnus M400 Close To The Edge: Yes: Close to the Edge: 1972 Rick Wakeman M400
The Mellotron was used extensively by German electronic band Tangerine Dream through the 1970s, [56] on albums such as Atem (1973), [56] Phaedra (1974), [57] Rubycon (1975), [58] Stratosfear (1976), [59] and Encore (1977). [59] In the late 1970s, French duo Space Art used a Mellotron during the recording of their second album, Trip in the ...
The Birotron was named after its inventor, Dave Biro, and developed with investment from regular Mellotron player Rick Wakeman. [1] [2] Like the Mellotron, the instrument produced sounds from magnetic tape, but it used eight-track tape in a loop. As such tapes never need rewinding, this avoided the problem that the Mellotron had, where a sound ...
Chamberlin would receive royalty payments from the Mellotron company, though this apparently ended in the late 1960s. Through this same royalty system, he licensed the Chamberlin "3 violins" sound to be used as the violins sound in the Mellotron library. This sound was used on much of the British Mellotron music since the mid-1960s.
Prior to recording the album, Wilson set out to find a grand piano, which was to serve as the centerpiece and main feature on the album and help to achieve a more epic sound than previous. [2] Wilson found a Steinway Grand Piano for sale on Craigslist and was lucky enough to convince the seller for him to rent it for about nine months. [3]
Following the auction in 2022 of a new version of “Blowin’ in the Wind” that sold to a bidder for $1.8 million, three more re-recordings Bob Dylan has made of his classic songs with producer ...
The Mellotron was used by multi-instrumentalist Graham Bond from 1965 [17] and soon adopted by Mike Pinder of The Moody Blues from 1966 on songs including "Nights In White Satin" and by The Beatles from "Strawberry Fields Forever" (1967). [18]
That sardine-can experience got me daydreaming about the golden age of flying—the 1950s to the 1970s—when airlines went all out to create a genuinely luxurious experience.