*The HAMMOND® 935 would have been a good item for the Blended-Worship experiment.* I grew up under the influence of the Organ Reform Movement of the early 20th Century, and to the Classical organist Hammond Electric Instruments' B- and C-Series instruments were seriously short on Pedal tones. Most likely I'd have at least the 16', 8', and 4' Pedal principals active even with drawbars out on both manuals.
No, it's not your imagination. Something happened in the original production of this demo. I tried "fudging" the audio track to match it up with the video, but it wouldn't stay in sync.
Seems like it was shot with one camera from multiple angles, then of course the audio wouldn't align when everything was laid down. Should have been multiple cameras through a SEG with cuts, cross-fades, etc. It would have then been cohesive from beginning to end.
Does this physical Leslie built-in or is it an electronic Leslie simulator? Line apps that you would send to another system include the Leslie simulator or is it a straight, nan Leslie sound?
The 935 utilizes a digital Leslie circuit. It has an 11 pin output which you can connect the Leslie 812/814 multichannel cabinets. There is also a subwoofer output and stereo output connections.
A delightful instrument. No replacement for a pipe organ (its pipe sounds are far from authentic) but it would be excellent where a wide range of musical styles are wanted.
With the exception of Walker, not many digital instruments sound like a pipe organ. This was recorded directly through the outputs on the back of the console and not played into a live room with loudspeakers. The stock voicing which was done at the Hammond factory (which this is) lacks. In the right hands someone who is very familiar with pipe voicing can make it sound a lot more believable. With the proper loudspeakers it can sound like a much larger instrument.
The tonal finisher I have used has worked with Virgil Fox, Diane Bish, Hector Olivera, Tom Hazelton, Allan Van Zoeren, and several others. He did the tonal finishing for Carnegie Hall NYC (analog Rodgers), St. Mary's Cathedral SFO (Ruffatti pipe organ), Davies Hall SFO (Ruffatti pipe organ), and a host of others.
There are a number of manufacturers producing instruments with very authentic pipe-organ sounds (notably Allen), but any comparison would be invalid without knowing the pricing of this, its specs, etc etc. For many purposes, with the sort of price I suspect would have been asked for this, it could be an excellent choice. As I said, 'a delightful instrument'.
I believe it was a production mistake. I think a single camera was used for the various angles. When everything was laid down, I think the audio track was placed in first and then the video segments were pasted in. If each segment had been videoed with multiple cameras (which of course increases production cost) from start to finish everything would be in as Benny Hill would say "syncopation". :o) I originally tried to match up the video to the audio track when transferring it from the DVD, however the audio/video timing kept changing. The video has so many hits now that I would lose them all if I tried to modify it further.
i guess this video is what it could sound like with the room acoustics instead? (even though it's the slightly earlier model 926) th-cam.com/video/XNosiYu-vY4/w-d-xo.html
I've always waned this Hammond 935 it's the Ultimate Organ.
i'd love to have one.
*The HAMMOND® 935 would have been a good item for the Blended-Worship experiment.* I grew up under the influence of the Organ Reform Movement of the early 20th Century, and to the Classical organist Hammond Electric Instruments' B- and C-Series instruments were seriously short on Pedal tones. Most likely I'd have at least the 16', 8', and 4' Pedal principals active even with drawbars out on both manuals.
Hence why Hammond made the RT2 and RT3. The Pedal Solo Unit is wonderful sounding.
Ways the name of that hymn at 6:55?
6:54 can someone remind me the name of this hymn
"On Eagle's Wings"
Sorry,the best Hammond Organ Player coming from Germany!
Barbara Dennerlein!
I think I need that for New Eden sda church but I have to make lots of money
Sweet, but I still miss my B-3.
Is it only me who has the sound shifted about 5 seconds after the video?
No, it's not your imagination. Something happened in the original production of this demo. I tried "fudging" the audio track to match it up with the video, but it wouldn't stay in sync.
Seems like it was shot with one camera from multiple angles, then of course the audio wouldn't align when everything was laid down. Should have been multiple cameras through a SEG with cuts, cross-fades, etc. It would have then been cohesive from beginning to end.
I still like the b3
Does this physical Leslie built-in or is it an electronic Leslie simulator? Line apps that you would send to another system include the Leslie simulator or is it a straight, nan Leslie sound?
The 935 utilizes a digital Leslie circuit. It has an 11 pin output which you can connect the Leslie 812/814 multichannel cabinets. There is also a subwoofer output and stereo output connections.
Can it emulate some of the B3 sounds?
It’s important to wear your jewelry when playing the Hammond 935
It adds a little extra percussion sound, don't you think? ;)
A delightful instrument. No replacement for a pipe organ (its pipe sounds are far from authentic) but it would be excellent where a wide range of musical styles are wanted.
With the exception of Walker, not many digital instruments sound like a pipe organ.
This was recorded directly through the outputs on the back of the console and not played into a live room with loudspeakers.
The stock voicing which was done at the Hammond factory (which this is) lacks. In the right hands someone who is very familiar with pipe voicing can make it sound a lot more believable.
With the proper loudspeakers it can sound like a much larger instrument.
The tonal finisher I have used has worked with Virgil Fox, Diane Bish, Hector Olivera, Tom Hazelton, Allan Van Zoeren, and several others. He did the tonal finishing for Carnegie Hall NYC (analog Rodgers), St. Mary's Cathedral SFO (Ruffatti pipe organ), Davies Hall SFO (Ruffatti pipe organ), and a host of others.
There are a number of manufacturers producing instruments with very authentic pipe-organ sounds (notably Allen), but any comparison would be invalid without knowing the pricing of this, its specs, etc etc. For many purposes, with the sort of price I suspect would have been asked for this, it could be an excellent choice. As I said, 'a delightful instrument'.
Allen's pipe voices are WAY better than on this 935!
This is an "out of the box" voicing. An "out of the box" Allen digital in the wrong room will also sound bad.
Why does the performance not match the video ?
I believe it was a production mistake. I think a single camera was used for the various angles. When everything was laid down, I think the audio track was placed in first and then the video segments were pasted in. If each segment had been videoed with multiple cameras (which of course increases production cost) from start to finish everything would be in as Benny Hill would say "syncopation". :o)
I originally tried to match up the video to the audio track when transferring it from the DVD, however the audio/video timing kept changing.
The video has so many hits now that I would lose them all if I tried to modify it further.
i guess this video is what it could sound like with the room acoustics instead? (even though it's the slightly earlier model 926)
th-cam.com/video/XNosiYu-vY4/w-d-xo.html
Floppy disk media??
what's old is new again. handier than those itty bitty little SD cards, which is what i woulda used for this function.
I’ve played one, hated it
Well the Hammond 935 isn't for everyone.
Never heard from this Organ... It's a mix between church Organ and Tonewheel Organ.
The Sounds from church Organ are not sampled?
@@Keyboardhugo it is electronic organ, with two sound engines: B-3 type voices are from virtual tonewheel module, pipe organ voices are sampled
@@awaken77 thanks for information!