Angels In A Cathedral / Polyphonic Tonic
Saturday,30October

So far I've experienced a few shortcuts but music remains the only way to truly establish contact with the other side and to do that in a proper way sometimes the Tone Generators needs a new set of Germanium Transistors, they're almost impossible to find these days and without them these organs will never sound the same.

This is when you regret you started to work on it in the first place... Each key contact is fed a mixture of 2 or more footages, providing that classic rich Vox organ sound, and there's nothing quite like it.

Almost there, tuning it takes a while but ones done properly it will sound beyond heavenly, like angels in a cathedral.
This 1966 combo organ has got 4 octaves total, flute, brass, vibrato + a walking bass feature with a separate output so you can plug it into two different amps at the same time.







But be careful my friends... Don´t mess around....
Go graph you children's coloring book, practice when they are sleep, and before you know it...
Your´ll be ready to rumble.
May i refere to my all time Hero Mr. Verner Panton:
Choosing colors should not be a gamble.
It should be a conscious decision.
Colors have a meaning and a function.
Not only can we learn something, but it´s for sure a cool looking book...
are the creative force behind the new book. Copenhagen City of Bicycles
I can only say - It´s awesome, and I´m more than pleased to be a part of it.
"As a member of the bourgeois society I am constained:
on my bicycle I am free.
As a citizen of Copenhagen I am a poor, landless creature paying taxes to cobblestones.
On my bicycle I am master of the entire country and knight of all highways and accessible field tracks."
-Vilhem Andersen, Danish writer, 1902
and have interest in the culture behind the world leading bicycle city Copenhagen.
I can only recommend it.
(The book´s with English and danish text.)
More about the book HERE
Buy the book HERE
Last week, at tea time, we made a visit to the Ruby helmet crew, it was a very pleasent moment.
Thank you Jérome.
.