@@ChruthFabianYou ain’t kidding. I had the GR 700 which I could never get ready for live performance..however, many pros did. But I am sure the Roland company had their techs set it up. I have the GR55 now and it was a bit of work to set up but I use it for live performances weekly.
Vox should bring back the guitars they made in the 60's. Ultrasonic, Teardrop, Phantom, etc. People are killing each other trying to get their hands on those guitars...it would be smart to start making them again. Innovative, yet classic!
Just amazing to actually see and hear Dick Denney! He was a genius inventor. He invented the classic Vox AC15 and AC30 guitar amps, the Vox fuzz pedal the "Tone Bender" and the Vox guitar organ you see here. He was a friend of both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and gave Paul McCartney the Vox Tone Bender you hear on the Beatles record "Rubber Soul." It's too bad the original Vox company went out of business after 1967 when both Denny and owner Tom Jennings left the company, but their products live on.
Well, no, he didn’t but he was very adept at it. And when that commercial came out no one was aware tapping had been going on for a long time. Jazzers didn’t do it or rockers at the time which is why it seemed new.
@@valley_robot OMG…well I am not surprised. Musicians, hmmmm. That name applies to someone who continues to hoan his craft, to challenge themself….it also applies to someone who plays two chords badly.
@@RobertVeasquez the theramin is from 1928, a VCO or voltage controlled oscillator, pitch and volume controlled by proximity to the the two antenna, it's a synthesiser
pjmuck they have resistors inside the neck, and as the guy said the strings complete a circuit when they touch the frets, the lower the note the more resistors in its way and the higher the resistance, so each note has its very own distinct resistance and that's how it tracks so well
@@morbidmanmusic not for a large scale selling guitar, the amount of routing and soldering you have to do would make it way too expensive Remember, gibson sell their basic guitar for a thousand and they have shitty hardware these days…
The patent for the Guitorgan was 1st registered in 1954 by a man from Newark NJ. I tried to file a similar patent in the late 1970s and it cost me $500 to find that out . Hahaahaaahahha!
Mid or late 70's i ran into a guitar player on the holiday inn circuit. He had a Gibson 335 model re-worked to a Organ guitar. Had the Leslie cabinet and his guitar amp and bass pedals. Perfect B-3 sound. After hours he let me play it. Very Heavy ! & very complicated circuits. A blast to play tho
I bought a wah pedal at a pawn shop, and took it home and took back off of it, the board said Thomas organ company on the green board, it was made in sixties, later i learned that it was one of the very first wah wah pedals ever made
Most of the Vox amps in the US were made by the Thomas Organ Company. Early ones, before 1965, came from England. I bought a Vox Cambridge Reverb amp in mid-‘66 that was a Thomas product. At the end of 1966, I got a Vox Phantom XII guitar that was made by the Eko guitar company in Italy. Most of the Vox guitars that made it to the US were Italian.
Yeah I'm pretty sure that whoever built the first stringed instrument with a fingerboard also invented tapping. EVH just popularized it and brought it to the hard rock/metal world.
When I was very young I saw what was either a white Phantom VI or a copy (this was around 1975ish) hanging behind the counter of the musical instrument store. I never tried it out, but I never forgot it. It really enchanted me.
It has just been pointed out to me that his name is actually Dick Denney. I knew him when I was a teenager and even bought an amp from him once, but the host got it wrong and caused me to have a brain fart. Thanks. :) Sorry to be such a pain in the arse...
The Casio DG20 digital guitar does a similar thing in terms of infinite sustain and two types of organ on it. However the Casio DG20 is both a midi controller and early digital guitar, like having a Casio keyboard activated by a guitar that's basically fretless with plastic strings. Whilst this vox organ guitar is totally unique it can do organs, flute like sounds, arpeggiator rapid fire, and normal guitar sounds
0:55 interestingly, i remember dan castellaneta describing taking "D'oh!" and shortening it down to how it came known to be, but he adopted it from an older laurel & hardy actor, i didnt know it was universally known and used as this is exactly how i heard dan castellanetta express how it originally sounded
I knew a guy that had one of those back in the day, and there’s a good reason they never caught on. EDIT: And I had (still have) a Vox Phantom and I never understood why they didn’t catch on.
The way Americans spoke English sixty years ago is completely different from the Contemporary American English. I enjoy listening to these people because they speak correct English
Today's mass media is aimed at the lowest common denominator viewer. In today's highly complex world, specialized devices like this one would go way over the heads of most viewers. That's why internet streaming sites like TH-cam exist. If you are a drummer, guitarist or whatever, there's a TH-cam channel available for each instrument. That's where they show us all the myriad of "toys" and studio magic used to create unique sounds. Television can never return to its glory days. They are over and done with. The Learning channel has nothing educational, the History Channel is effectively useless, and MTV has little to do with music. TH-cam and other streaming services have killed whatever good material was left on TV. Podcasts have also decimated whatever audience TV had left. It's still a mystery to me why television still exists at all.
Dick Denney was a great innovator, this guitar was way ahead of its time and the great thing here is you get the keyboard like 'infinite' notes which you can't get on a guitar without some sort of feedback device like an E Bow or a mega distortion. Jimmy Webster mad the 'two handed tapping' method famous in the 50's demoing Gretsch guitars.
The way the organ part of this guitar works is not really how tapping works in the Van Halen sense. That said, Eddie was still not the first, but he probably came up with the idea on his own. It's the sort of thing that anyone playing around with an electric guitar and a relatively high-gain might stumble onto.
Tapping goes back centuries. Eddie, Steve Hackett, etc. (who was there before Eddie), they all used it but it was an established technique long before they came along. @@wbfaulk
I think your all missing the point here, I've seen and played one of these before. The fret bored is the keyboard, the whole purpose is that you can play a keyboard part but you can also play guitar at once
There's no need to replicate this. There are things like piezo pickups for every individual string, with direct to midi output etc. Very niche, but replicating something like this would be pointless because we simply have better tech to achieve same goal - turn guitar into synth.
I can't think of any that were done like this. This is a ridiculously complicated device that was horrendously expensive to make. It wasn't long before people came up with much simpler ways to do it.
There was an Italian-made guitar/organ in the early ‘70s called a Godwin. Had abouut a million switches on it. In the ‘60s and ‘70s a guy from Waco, TX, named Bob Murrell (I think) had something called a Guitorgan. The early ones had the tone generators and circuitry built into Japanese Gibson Barney Kessel copies, because they had full body depth and all the organ electronics would fit inside. Later ones were built into Japanese ES-345 copies. They made one called a B-300, which they claimed sounded like a Hammond B-3 organ. All these things had wired frets to trigger the organ sounds. I think the Guitorgan predated both the Vox and the Godwin, but I’m not 100% sure about that. All of them definitely predated the Casio.
Sorry yeahproductions...I've just got the one with the guitar. Hope you can find one ! Ps. the guitar is still for sale, pleas pm for info or offer. Regards,
I have one but I am needing a power supply box. And do they weigh a ton! Wouldn't want to play a whole concert with one. They actually came out before 1967, in the U.K.
SERIOUSLY. How many Les Paul reissues does the world need? MAKE THESE!
At the time, it was a disaster, because it rarely ever worked right. With today's technology, it could probably succeed.
Or just any of vox’s phantoms. Love the phantom 4, 6, and 12. If i had the money i’d have a dozen of each
It's called the gr-55 and it took till 2011 to get anything close to stage ready
I know man
@@ChruthFabianYou ain’t kidding. I had the GR 700 which I could never get ready for live performance..however, many pros did. But I am sure the Roland company had their techs set it up. I have the GR55 now and it was a bit of work to set up but I use it for live performances weekly.
Vox should bring back the guitars they made in the 60's. Ultrasonic, Teardrop, Phantom, etc. People are killing each other trying to get their hands on those guitars...it would be smart to start making them again. Innovative, yet classic!
13 year old comment....but still relevant today unfortunately.
@@flamey70 They actually did and they didn't sell well.
You can find new ones and there are some from UK that were assembled from original parts from the Pescara Factory in Italy. Look up ",Brandoni".
@@theothertonydutch oh really!? Didn't know that 👍
My very first guitar was a vox teardrop. I really wish I still had it.
Just amazing to actually see and hear Dick Denney! He was a genius inventor. He invented the classic Vox AC15 and AC30 guitar amps, the Vox fuzz pedal the "Tone Bender" and the Vox guitar organ you see here. He was a friend of both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and gave Paul McCartney the Vox Tone Bender you hear on the Beatles record "Rubber Soul." It's too bad the original Vox company went out of business after 1967 when both Denny and owner Tom Jennings left the company, but their products live on.
"a weapon from a more civilized age..." ;D
Dick Denny on TV!! The man that invented the AC30, arguably the most MUSICAL sounding guitar amp ever made.
At the request of Hank Marvin from the Shadows. th-cam.com/video/8p_rgaUkVbQ/w-d-xo.html
Not only did he invent a guitar that can sound like an organ, the man invented tapping…
Well, no, he didn’t but he was very adept at it. And when that commercial came out no one was aware tapping had been going on for a long time. Jazzers didn’t do it or rockers at the time which is why it seemed new.
@@RobertVeasquezwell said, when I tell so called musicians that synthesis and synths were a thing way before the electric guitar they don’t believe me
@@valley_robot OMG…well I am not surprised. Musicians, hmmmm. That name applies to someone who continues to hoan his craft, to challenge themself….it also applies to someone who plays two chords badly.
@@RobertVeasquez the theramin is from 1928, a VCO or voltage controlled oscillator, pitch and volume controlled by proximity to the the two antenna, it's a synthesiser
not really, Spanish guitar teqnique of Tapping goes back hundreds of years,
Love it !!! Vox made wonderful instruments and amplifiers !
Excellent note tracking. I play midi guitar and it's always a challenge tracking or keeping it from playing misfired notes and glitches.
pjmuck they have resistors inside the neck, and as the guy said the strings complete a circuit when they touch the frets, the lower the note the more resistors in its way and the higher the resistance, so each note has its very own distinct resistance and that's how it tracks so well
@@billyhendry8369 trying to imagine how they managed to do that in the 60's and understanding why a reissue is impossible for a fair price....
Easy tech even then.
@@morbidmanmusic not for a large scale selling guitar, the amount of routing and soldering you have to do would make it way too expensive
Remember, gibson sell their basic guitar for a thousand and they have shitty hardware these days…
Dick Denney : LEGEND !!!
After the curtain came up and he started playing, it sounded like the beginning of Beautiful Dreamer. Love to hear more .
About 19 of these instruments were imported to Australia by Nicholsons music store, in the late 1960's. So, not too many around.
The patent for the Guitorgan was 1st registered in 1954 by a man from Newark NJ. I tried to file a similar patent in the late 1970s and it cost me $500 to find that out . Hahaahaaahahha!
0:55 Steve Allen let's an amazing "D'ohhh!" rip. Homer would be jealous.
He let something else rip at 1:21
Mid or late 70's i ran into a guitar player on the holiday inn circuit. He had a Gibson 335 model re-worked to a Organ guitar. Had the Leslie cabinet and his guitar amp and bass pedals. Perfect B-3 sound. After hours he let me play it. Very Heavy ! & very complicated circuits. A blast to play tho
Thank you very much for posting this. Really a historic moment in Vox history.
that;s pure psichedelyc sound !!!
Steve Allen was great . Back when TV still had class.
Yeah, the repartee is pretty sharp. Smart people being funny.
Jimdep642 .... you told that right.... loved that, "you wanna take it outside, cause there's no room for it in here"....
What a sensational instrument.
Few musisicians bought it.
more like a cheesy toy
Two handed work, speedy classical themes, he was the package before there was a package!
I bought a wah pedal at a pawn shop, and took it home and took back off of it, the board said Thomas organ company on the green board, it was made in sixties, later i learned that it was one of the very first wah wah pedals ever made
Most of the Vox amps in the US were made by the Thomas Organ Company. Early ones, before 1965, came from England. I bought a Vox Cambridge Reverb amp in mid-‘66 that was a Thomas product. At the end of 1966, I got a Vox Phantom XII guitar that was made by the Eko guitar company in Italy. Most of the Vox guitars that made it to the US were Italian.
This is THE GUY who invented TAPPING. Ok now we know 1967,wow!
Yeah I'm pretty sure that whoever built the first stringed instrument with a fingerboard also invented tapping. EVH just popularized it and brought it to the hard rock/metal world.
It's been popular since the 1800s in written music. Ugh...
Classical guitarists have been “tapping” since the late eighteenth century.
There's a video here on YT called "Eddie Van Halen's Dad" of some guy in the 1930's or whenever, tapping like mad on a ukelele or something.
WOW, Ive been wanting to hear one of these go off for so long! Damn!
Kewl!
The ‘Great and ‘Very talented ‘Steve Allen ‘ 🤓🎶🙏🏼❤️🎭🎈
so, EVH saw this video??
My thoughts exactly!
Dang this is actually funny. I wish they would actually make this damn thing today
Almost a synthesizer guitar.
It's hard to come up with a reason why this wouldn't be considered a synthesizer, albeit one without a lot of tone manipulation options.
Dick Denning should be in the tags of this video. He was a great innovator and a true gentleman.
Steve Allen, Dick Denney, they sure don't make 'em like they used to...
I have an Electro Harmonix guitar pedal sounds just like this. very adjustible with many sounds.
That message was quick and colorful
WHEW! How awesome is that. I want one.
When I was very young I saw what was either a white Phantom VI or a copy (this was around 1975ish) hanging behind the counter of the musical instrument store. I never tried it out, but I never forgot it. It really enchanted me.
I have an 80,s Yamaha EZ AG it leaves this for dead!! Tonaly and much more dynamic but also very rare now
id like to try one for a jam session might be interesting , tho i realize there are pedals but to play a VOX like that would be really cool
It has just been pointed out to me that his name is actually Dick Denney. I knew him when I was a teenager and even bought an amp from him once, but the host got it wrong and caused me to have a brain fart. Thanks. :)
Sorry to be such a pain in the arse...
wow! amazing!!
That is such a neat & cool sounding instrument. Would love to play one...
The Casio DG20 digital guitar does a similar thing in terms of infinite sustain and two types of organ on it. However the Casio DG20 is both a midi controller and early digital guitar, like having a Casio keyboard activated by a guitar that's basically fretless with plastic strings. Whilst this vox organ guitar is totally unique it can do organs, flute like sounds, arpeggiator rapid fire, and normal guitar sounds
The Casio DG20 came out in 1987, 20 years after the VOX V251. By 1987, we had all sort of computerized synths and synth guitars.
amazing
Steve Allen was the original host of the Tonight Show.
When I bought my gretsch at music ground they had two of these one black and one white , was so cool
New “Eruption” lead into “You Really Got Me”!
I'd love to hear Yngwie playing one of these.Then he could be Blackmore AND Lord.
Very impressive, very beautiful fot that years
I would love to have one of these.
I actually remember watching this show! Cheers!
It's the future of guitars. They will all be like that soon.
0:55 interestingly, i remember dan castellaneta describing taking "D'oh!" and shortening it down to how it came known to be, but he adopted it from an older laurel & hardy actor, i didnt know it was universally known and used as this is exactly how i heard dan castellanetta express how it originally sounded
I knew a guy that had one of those back in the day, and there’s a good reason they never caught on.
EDIT: And I had (still have) a Vox Phantom and I never understood why they didn’t catch on.
just BAAAAAAAD-ASSSSSSS
The way Americans spoke English sixty years ago is completely different from the Contemporary American English. I enjoy listening to these people because they speak correct English
the first hammer ons recorded for television Pre Van Halen
Bring back the Vox Guitar Organ AND Steve Allen!
The worlds first looper! 🎼🎸
Too bad we can't have shows like this nowadays becasue nothing you show us can suprise us the way this could in those years.
Today's mass media is aimed at the lowest common denominator viewer. In today's highly complex world, specialized devices like this one would go way over the heads of most viewers.
That's why internet streaming sites like TH-cam exist. If you are a drummer, guitarist or whatever, there's a TH-cam channel available for each instrument. That's where they show us all the myriad of "toys" and studio magic used to create unique sounds.
Television can never return to its glory days. They are over and done with. The Learning channel has nothing educational, the History Channel is effectively useless, and MTV has little to do with music. TH-cam and other streaming services have killed whatever good material was left on TV. Podcasts have also decimated whatever audience TV had left. It's still a mystery to me why television still exists at all.
I want one!!
This was before I was born.
Dick Denney was a great innovator, this guitar was way ahead of its time and the great thing here is you get the keyboard like 'infinite' notes which you can't get on a guitar without some sort of feedback device like an E Bow or a mega distortion. Jimmy Webster mad the 'two handed tapping' method famous in the 50's demoing Gretsch guitars.
There's sustainer pickups
Really cool! Thanks
Way before its time
damn that shredding
Pink Floyd + That Guitar = too much awesomeness for the human race to handle....thats why
I wanted this VOX Guitar when I was a Kid,ARE there any out there ??
Dude doing some Eddie Van Halen hammer-ons before his EVH was born!! lol
TRANSISTORS! They make immediately recognizable distinctive sounds.
DOUCHEBAG! It makes immediately recognizable distinctive comments.
It's the FUTURE!
Makes me laugh when he goes “It can sound like a Hawaiian guitar” and plays it in just standard guitar mode
but it sort of did anyway LOL
This is the most painful interaction I’ve ever encountered
All these years later EHX makes it possible to have so many organ effects. As Maestro Blight I employ sustain and Leslie and harmonies.
Some try to say Eddie Van Halen invented finger tapping. This guy was doing it in 67 and I'll bet he wasn't the first.
The way the organ part of this guitar works is not really how tapping works in the Van Halen sense. That said, Eddie was still not the first, but he probably came up with the idea on his own. It's the sort of thing that anyone playing around with an electric guitar and a relatively high-gain might stumble onto.
Tapping goes back centuries. Eddie, Steve Hackett, etc. (who was there before Eddie), they all used it but it was an established technique long before they came along. @@wbfaulk
Organ that looks like a gee tar..lemme see the corn on the cob version.
One of these sold at Auction in England this month for £2,400.
wooooooow 1967!!
Here he was tapping on the guitar neck about the time Eddie Van Halen was born…
There was a guitar that came out in early 1970’s…it was called the “guitorgan”.
Brilliant!!!
Well, that guitar is probably in a museum by now, or in a Very private collection.
Brilliant. :)
because they already had Richard Wright!
there are LP' with this in it. that should be a reissue!
The presenter seems completely unimpressed by this. It goes without saying it was ahead of its time.
ONLY GULLIBLE TEENS ARE IMPRESSED BY THIS TOY.
Yes.
hahah, that guy is pretty much doing two-handed tapping years before all of that shredding started!
This innovated the synth guitar
I think your all missing the point here, I've seen and played one of these before. The fret bored is the keyboard, the whole purpose is that you can play a keyboard part but you can also play guitar at once
If anyone knows where I can find V251 Guitar, please let me know. I would pay very well for $uch a piece of history. $$$$$!
Theres always one Prima Donna in the team
I NEED IT. NOW. I WILL MAKE SACRIFICES.
just wondering, did any other guitar company replicate this, if not, wow, vox should get much more credit than it got
Yes several and many organ pedals that you can use with any guitar
There's no need to replicate this. There are things like piezo pickups for every individual string, with direct to midi output etc. Very niche, but replicating something like this would be pointless because we simply have better tech to achieve same goal - turn guitar into synth.
I can't think of any that were done like this. This is a ridiculously complicated device that was horrendously expensive to make. It wasn't long before people came up with much simpler ways to do it.
There was an Italian-made guitar/organ in the early ‘70s called a Godwin. Had abouut a million switches on it. In the ‘60s and ‘70s a guy from Waco, TX, named Bob Murrell (I think) had something called a Guitorgan. The early ones had the tone generators and circuitry built into Japanese Gibson Barney Kessel copies, because they had full body depth and all the organ electronics would fit inside. Later ones were built into Japanese ES-345 copies. They made one called a B-300, which they claimed sounded like a Hammond B-3 organ. All these things had wired frets to trigger the organ sounds. I think the Guitorgan predated both the Vox and the Godwin, but I’m not 100% sure about that. All of them definitely predated the Casio.
@@Quicksilver_Cookie The frets work more like a Stylophone (in a bad or good sense), so this could likely produce certain sounds a midi guitar can't.
Steve Allen rules the Universe
@guitarjur Because Gilmour wouldnt have known what to do with it with Richard Wright in the band
dude shredded.
Great clip. I had one of these, they did crackle a lot! K
Hmmm...what was that mysterious sound at 1:20? They seemed to find it funny. Could have been a bull frog, I suppose.
Sorry yeahproductions...I've just got the one with the guitar. Hope you can find one ! Ps. the guitar is still for sale, pleas pm for info or offer.
Regards,
A $600 instrument in 1967 would be $5400 in 2023. I can see why they didn't sell many of them!
I have one but I am needing a power supply box.
And do they weigh a ton! Wouldn't want to play a whole concert with one.
They actually came out before 1967, in the U.K.
This is the first time I have heard someone make it sound like an organ....sort of.
The V251 must have been a BEAST! Anyone have any idea what that thing weighed?
Guy Fawkes : Damn good question! A friend turned me on to this instrument a few years ago, but I never of how heavy it might be.
Guy Fawkes. If you make it hollow and fill it with electronics i don’t think it will be much heavier thab a regular electric guitar.
They weigh way more than an average guitar.
@Awesomo4003 You'd have trouble finding a right handed one!
Star Trek guitar!
Eddie Van Halen watched this and said, 'Hey let me try that'