James finds a $300.00 Hammond Organ, your thoughts? Cheap Deals

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 ก.ย. 2018
  • In his travels James finds a $300.00 Hammond organ with a few problems. (Pacific Thrift Store 6101 Watt Ave North Highlands, CA) It makes a lot of noise when sitting at idle, but once you start playing it seems to quite up quite a bit. This is not a model we have ever seen before as it was obviously made after the famed B-3 run, but was most assuredly in very limited production. It is not our policy to talk about money, but made an exception in this case as the organ would only make sense because of it's low price as it needed work. Does anyone have an idea what would make it make a noise like this, but mostly when the piano was at idle, if so let us know in the comments.
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ความคิดเห็น • 452

  • @HisXLNC
    @HisXLNC 4 ปีที่แล้ว +115

    I remember seeing organs like that at the organ store at the mall when I was a kid. Yes, they had organ stores in malls. I’m that old.

    • @crisprtalk6963
      @crisprtalk6963 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      i remember those stores.

    • @mikerca
      @mikerca 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yep... Willowbrook Mall in Wayne N.J. Had a Hammond store.

    • @DesertTripper
      @DesertTripper 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Oh, how I used to love the organ store as a kid! Of course, the organ store salesmen took a dim view of kids messing around with the devices so I didn't get to play much.

    • @LittleRockElevators
      @LittleRockElevators 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I remember the mall in Hot Springs AR, they had a organ store called Capitol Keyboard. They had Baldwin, Conn, Hammond, and I believe Wurlitzer organs.

    • @craigbrowning9448
      @craigbrowning9448 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      When I was a a Kid, the local mall had both a Lowery dealership and Sherman & Clay (a Kimball Dealership). Both of these faded and one called Colton (they sold Technics Organs and Schafer & Sons pianos) all these are gone now.

  • @douglasrizzo9210
    @douglasrizzo9210 5 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    Hammond Concorde! Looks like a 1977. You scored a winner. One rare bird.

  • @techy5025
    @techy5025 5 ปีที่แล้ว +141

    I have the exact same organ (almost) sitting 20 feet from me as I type this. Electronically, the Concorde was a great design...mechanically not so much. First, that constructed all the electronic (PC) boards out of phenolic. Over time they warp and so when inserted into rigid inline edge connector sockets, some of the edge contacts....do not make contact and this can cause a lot of random problems. Boards made out of glass epoxy, while slightly more expensive, do not have this problem. No one uses phenolic anymore. Cleaning the contacts will not solve this problem, but will help the ones that are still making contact.
    Hammond used the best capacitors available at the time they designed the organ...late 60's. The only ones that I have seen fail are the power supply electrolytics as they do with age in all electronics. When they are leaky, they typically cause hum..not static. The tone wheel organs had a bunch of "orange drop" caps in the tone wheel assembly that have to eventually be replaced also as they drift in value with age.
    The IC's in the Concorde were custom designed by Mostek .. a Texas company that also made the parts for the first electronic calculator and many other things. Very new technology in the 60's and probably .. counting their design cost as it was unique to the Concorde .. was half the cost of the organ for Hammond as everything else is discrete parts and common ... still available today.
    I designed electronics for a living and am now retired with time so fixing these problems became a challenge for me. ;) When I bought the organ in the early 70's they gave me the service manual so I had all the electronic info. I relaid out all the boards in glass epoxy, combined some circuits onto fewer boards (there were a lot of boards!) as smaller and better parts are available today, and ... because engineers can't resist "fixing things" .. changed a few circuits including the power supply which was ... a mess. The original "unobtainium" IC"s were carefully removed from the original boards and installed in sockets in the new ones. So now when I turn it on, I can count on no problems. I hope! A fun almost year long project, but glad I didn't have to pay for the labor!
    I've seem the custom IC's being sold on the web for 200 dollars each ... and there are 45 of them, so if you find a Concorde cheap, carefully remove the IC's from the boards, and then throw the rest of the organ away you could make some real bucks!
    Hammond designed and sold several other "IC" organs after the Concorde including the Elegante in the early 80's. Between their design cost and the fact that people were not buying home organs any more, it probably put them out of business.
    Jim

    • @dale116dot7
      @dale116dot7 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Cool project! I’ve done a similar sort of project on my Soundcraft 2400. The original PC boards were FR4 but single sided. So many pads lifted from the leverage of especially the TT patchbay jacks but also some of the switches. I’ve redone most of the board in double sided FR4 with very generous pad sizes on both top and bottom, and it is now very reliable. Some of these ‘disasters’ can be cool projects when you are an engineer or technician.

    • @Hungry_Hunter
      @Hungry_Hunter 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I came across one of these back in the mid 90's when I had a business fixing organs . These were almost impossible to repair due to the custom chips you described and the warped boards were a nightmare. Cudos for fixing yours that's a labour of love. I have an L111 which is much simpler and through my Leslie 147 RV it sounds like a Hammond should.

    • @jimmybuffet4970
      @jimmybuffet4970 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Kind of a shock (get it?) when you consider that the contacts in a B3 were made out of palladium.

    • @rillloudmother
      @rillloudmother 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I was going to say, that thing is definitely pre-1980s just from the external design, but also organs were so uncool by the 80s because of synths.

    • @dnantis
      @dnantis 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I hope you also took the time to think adding a feature to your new glass epoxy PCBs !!!..... yes ADDING A MIDI RETROFIT TO IT....OF COURSE, IF YOU BELIEVE IT CAN BE DONE !!
      THAT WOULD BE AWESOME AND EVEN NOT HAVING TOUCH SENSITIVITY
      IT ADDS A LOT SPECIALLY IF YOU PLAY VIRTUAL SYNTHS LIKE THE
      B4 II by Native Instruments Plugin.....but now it is discontinued !
      There are other Virt Inst brands to find Hammond like sounds !
      Please post comment if you think you will add that and add your video
      working MIDI with your Concorde !!
      Thanks
      ps. sorry 4 the caps, the caps key got stuck !

  • @Journalique
    @Journalique 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    That "angry" crackling you hear is from the instrument, more specifically the speakers, being in a moist environment. The same thing happened to my 1973 Yamaha organ back in the early 1980s when we moved it into the basement. Once back upstairs, the crackling stopped.

  • @davidlawson9973
    @davidlawson9973 5 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Wow! This brings back memories. It was in 1973 when this model showed up at First Glorious Church on Arthur Avenue in The Bronx. That's the church my mother's first cousin and her husband founded in the late 1950's. Forty-five years later, it's still in the building. It was relocated from the sanctuary to the third floor grand dining hall....and it still works.

  • @TubelabCom
    @TubelabCom 5 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    Last winter my wife and I were thrift store shopping over near Pittsburgh and we wandered into a Goodwill store. There was a Hammond M3 Tonewheel organ sitting in the furniture section. It looked like new except for a recent scratch likely acquired in the donation pickup. The store clerk said that it was being sold as a furniture item and it could not be tested or even plugged in due to its age and lack of a modern 3 prong power plug. It would not fit in my car, but I paid the asking price and was given 48 hours to pick it up or forfeit my money. Of course it was snowing when I set out to pick up the organ, but the guy unloading the donation truck helped me stuff the 250 pound beast into my Honda Element.....it barely fit. This M3 turns out to be from 1958. The original purchase receipt was in the bench, as was a receipt for $200 worth of servicing from just over a year prior. Seeing that, I decided to forgo the usual teardown needed for vintage electronics, and plug it in. To my surprise, it plays perfectly with no hum and all functions work. It's still going great 9 months on. The purchase price.......$39.95. It cost me more in gasoline to make the two 70 mile (each way) trips to get it.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      What a wonderful story. It's just great to hear about saving a vintage instrument from just being a piece of furniture or worse.

    • @TubelabCom
      @TubelabCom 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I used to play an ARP Odyssey back in the 70's, but never had a tonewheel Hammond or room for one. I was surprised to see it at a Goodwill store for cheap, and couldn't pass it up. I can't play like I did nearly 50 years ago, but still try. My daughter plays well and maybe one of her kids will get it somewhere down the road.

    • @sandrasanders706
      @sandrasanders706 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I wonder how many people are still around to rebuild these things what a unbelievably fantastic musical instrument

    • @normjnk
      @normjnk 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Now all you need is a Leslie to go with it; of course it will cost quite a bit more than the Hammond.

    • @donroberts1420
      @donroberts1420 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Booker T machine

  • @bromixsr
    @bromixsr 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I found a B3 with the Leslie for $300 at a garage sale last year. Needless to say, it is in my living room at the moment. The classics never go out of style.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think a lot of people out there feel they are going to the wrong garage sales.

  • @BruceTheSillyGoose
    @BruceTheSillyGoose 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    i really miss the organ days, back when every respectable department store had a music section with organs in it. as a little kit i'd make a beeline for the organs, joyously flupping the multicolored stoptabs and pushing buttons and twiddling knobs etc. i really loved the 2&2/3 nazard, the 2" fife and 1" piccolo stops, but the other people found them piercing and frowned at me. they shoulda been happy i never messed with the post horn.

  • @terryofford4977
    @terryofford4977 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Very interesting and even surprising to see such a young guy who obviously has a good knowledge of what is an amazing instrument (in the right hands of course) Hammond's possessed a particular 'SOUND' if anyone has over looked (not heard this sound) Dig out any Booker T especially Time Is Tight. No matter how many times I hear this number, I can listen all day to it. Thank You James,You are a star!.

  • @pianomanpaulthomas
    @pianomanpaulthomas 5 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    In the 60's, there were probably more piano & organ showrooms than guitar centers, and I drooled over organs at every store in my hometown. Organ makers were starting to add beat boxes and percussive tabs like banjo and piano. They sounded somewhat cheesy, but gave organists more options. Bass & cymbal on the pedals and snare & cymbal on the lower is borrowed from the traps in theatre/pipe organ - it works great in om-pah music. Hammond followed the new trends fairly quickly. And at that point, there had to be a speaker with a moving baffle to use the Leslie name; remember they were 2 separate companies. We have a similar Hammond at church but without the chrome pedals. That sleek look may have been copied from the the top of the line Yamaha Electone - everyone said it looked like a refrigerator. Finally, there are published copyrighted versions of “House of the Rising Sun” but the song itself actually predates copyright law. Thanks for the video.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Yes, but the version I played was from the Animals, and that version is copyrighted. I am in the process of writing a new arrangement for House of the Rising Sun, and it's coming out very nicely. It will have the same words as always as they are not copyrighted, it is not known who wrote the words, and so no copyright on them.

    • @ryano.5149
      @ryano.5149 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Fun fact: Guitar Center started out as Organ Center in California.

    • @johntsiaros2362
      @johntsiaros2362 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      a hammond organ is completely different to synthesizer right? i mean they are two comepletely different things. right? sorry for my stupid question

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@johntsiaros2362 Well for a vintage Hammond organ they would be on different ends of the universe.

    • @trudybergen3510
      @trudybergen3510 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      The flute sounds are the best.

  • @dananderson7330
    @dananderson7330 5 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I repaired a similar model Hammond for a relative in the '80's. If I am not mistaken the one feature I did not see you explain is the brass switched capacitance touch plate on the lower left manual that can be used (when set to "on") to set tempo and start a previously selected percussion rhythm automation by tapping the plate 1-2-3-4 (HAMMOND TOUCH TEMPO) Great Video.

  • @BruceInFlorida
    @BruceInFlorida 5 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I remember that organ !! It had the same drive belts as my mother's washing machine !! 😊

  • @danw1955
    @danw1955 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    These are completely solid state. No tonewheels and no tubes. I had an R-100, which is similar to this, and it seems 90% of the electronic gremlins on these are due to the 'edge-cards' they used to house the components. These individual boards plug into a bus, much the same as computer graphics and sound cards plug into a motherboard. The contacts get corroded over the years, and it's a pretty simple (but time consuming) job to pull all the cards and clean up the edge contacts with fine steel wool and some electronics spray. The spray also works well for any tab switches and potentiometers. ...and yes, the swell pedal should function for both the normal speaker, and the Leslie. There should be dual 'pots' on the pedal assembly that control both sides.😉 Hope you got it straightened out.😁

  • @JeffreyBrantEyeMD
    @JeffreyBrantEyeMD 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Amazing! I have almost the exact same Hammond Concorde organ (this model is the 2312M). The only real difference is that mine has the piston preset buttons located above the upper keyboard instead of on the left side of the keyboards (that's what the reversed black and white keys are on the model here). I bought mine used in 1981 in Montgomery, AL, for about $1800, if my memory serves me well. I still have this organ but just like this one, it suffers from hisses and pops as well as power supply problems (the organ sometimes just shuts off by itself). I thought it about finding someone to repair it, but after reading the comments here about the phenolic circuit boards and expensive ICs, I don't think it would make sense. While I'm pretty handy with fixing things, I don't think I want to take on the challenge of making all the repairs myself. (Maybe I should take out the ICs and sell them as someone here suggested and then trash the organ. Not sure I could bring myself to do that, though!)
    My wife wants me to get rid of this organ but it has sentimental value to me. I grew up in Miami, FL, with a Lowery spinet organ and later a Yamaha console organ in that was really junky compared to this Hammond.
    I wish they still made console organs like this. There's just something special about playing these, with all the bells and whistles, compared to a synthesizer. I, too, remember the organ/piano stores in the shopping malls. When I was a teenager, used to love going to the mall with my friends and then sitting down and playing a mall store console organ and waiting for a salesman to throw me out, only for him to do an about-face once he discovered I knew what I was doing and was a pretty good young organist. Then they would try to sell me one! (Very expensive back then.)
    If anyone here knows how to change the music rack light bulbs, please let me know. I know how to open the top of the organ but I can't for the life of me figure out how to get the translucent cover off the light to change a couple of the bulbs that are burned out.
    Thank you so much for posting this video and thanks for all those who commented!

  • @buckwheatINtheCity
    @buckwheatINtheCity 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Believe it or not, the first organ I ever saw in someone's home was that particular model with all those lighted switches on top. How could I ever forget it? Late 1970s or circa 1980. I love the look and sound.

  • @williamdixon1992
    @williamdixon1992 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Beautiful organ. I think it sounds great!

  • @aaronbarber6238
    @aaronbarber6238 5 ปีที่แล้ว +162

    My wife would kill me if brought this home.

    • @scottikidd9330
      @scottikidd9330 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @aaronhillsworld4230
      @aaronhillsworld4230 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @D2RG6 Lmao! Good one lol.

    • @dadautube
      @dadautube 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @ Aaron Barber: so would mine ... but between her and this, it's clear which one stays and the other HAS TO go! ;-) :D

    • @Dprest-nd4yc
      @Dprest-nd4yc 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      So grateful that I don't have a wife... But I still have a mom, rip.

    • @pellapaigeaah7579
      @pellapaigeaah7579 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      😂

  • @ToyKingWonder
    @ToyKingWonder 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Loved the organ and the demonstration. Always had an interest in organs and keyboards, although I cannot play anything, just make noise. We found a very nice, completely functional A-100 (a B3 but with built in amp and speakers!) for $500 at a church that had used it very little and then obtained a pipe organ. The thing really wails. It is extremely heavy, it took four of us to get it into the house without breaking anything. There are great deals out there. I still have my dad's Schober Theater Organ, which he made from a kit, even stained and finished the wood cabinet.

    • @armstronglance
      @armstronglance 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      ToyKingWonder Good find at $500!

    • @jimit6398
      @jimit6398 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      ToyKingWonder played in a band with an A-100 and Leslie. Took four of us to load it onto a U-Haul ! Great B-3 sound, just heavier

  • @manifestingbeautifullife2187
    @manifestingbeautifullife2187 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    my thoughts are HOW COOL IS THAT?!! LOVE THAT SOUND!!

  • @unclelouie3828
    @unclelouie3828 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    James, You're the BEST.

  • @PFunkonice
    @PFunkonice 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have one of these. I'm in the Indianapolis area and would be interested in finding it a home. My Dad bought it for my Mom in early 70,s. I'm sure it needs work and believe my Son had it playing 15 yrs ago. Grand kids loved flipping the tabs up n down. "Fascination" was the only song my Dad could play on it. He could make the chills go thru you. My Mom could really get it going.

  • @JohnNozum
    @JohnNozum 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    There's a possibility that I may have played this very same model of organ around 25-30 years ago. I do seem to remember it being a souped up Hammond organ. I think I remember really pushing the "speed limit" on that organ with some very fast playing, including possibly hitting keys repeatedly like a mandolin effect or doing some very fast fiddle-like effect. I do remember that it was NOT your average Hammond organ.
    Yes, I agree with HisXLNC below about organ stores inside of malls. I miss those days! The Ohio Valley Mall in St. Clairsville, OH had TWO such stores. Now they have ZERO.
    Anyway, may God's peace be with ya--in the name of Jesus!
    From a fellow organist and musician,
    John Nozum

  • @thugzman7890
    @thugzman7890 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Your original composition sounds like it could be some kickass video game 🎮 music!!

  • @SoggySandwich80
    @SoggySandwich80 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    1:46 ooooo that voice crack

  • @arthurhunt642
    @arthurhunt642 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I bought a Hammond X77 and X77 Leslie amplifier. Both of them were very heavy for sure. I bought them for $100.00. I paid my Nephew $200.00 to use his truck and help me get it home. After a month or so I put them up for sale and got $600.00. He came with rented truck and paid a friend of mine $50.00 to help load it. He had wanted one like that with the matching Leslie. He could play like crazy and happy to find them. I can't play but because I love the sound of them I wanted to get one to play around with.

    • @williamdixon1992
      @williamdixon1992 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Wow. That's all they are worth? Has beautiful sound. I would guess it's worth at least 1,800?

  • @judithlafeir6025
    @judithlafeir6025 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’m glad you found it before I did otherwise it be sitting next to my Roland AT90s. You found a great find.

  • @jamespolcyn8441
    @jamespolcyn8441 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    You are amazing ... you have so much knowledge ...

  • @MikeBorgerVideo
    @MikeBorgerVideo 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    That is one of several Hammond models that came out after the H-100 series and with features derived from the X-100, perhaps the finest Hammond electric organ ever made. The point of this model is to combine the full hammond drawbar system with percussion, vibrato, and so forth PLUS the tab section which adds the transistor organ and related sounds. That gives you great string, reed, and other sounds to combine with the Hammond sound. There are a lot of good miscellaneous percussion effects.There are a lot of cool things you can do if the organ is in full operating condition. It sounds like yours needs repair. The problem is finding parts AND a repair person that can help you. I prefer the current Hammond SK-1 and XK-3 with good synthesizers on the side. I wish you the best!

  • @danbozym6964
    @danbozym6964 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is a Concorde organ. It was introduced around 1974 if my memory serves me right. I was a Hammond Organ Service tech. I could work 7 days a week 24 hours a day on service calls, that how large the organ sales were. The Concorde did have a small rotating drum when it first came out and that was the leslie speaker. The pedal sustain switch on the foot pedal was used to cancel the sustain when you pushed the foot switch. The tabs not working just need cleaning and some silicon grease. THis would be great to have. I still have my spinet T-500 which is smaller than the concorde which was call a Console Organ.

  • @rrz518
    @rrz518 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    That my friends is a Hammond Concorde. It was the 2nd generation of the same name, the first was from the early 1970's. This one dates to about 1978. It was their best model at the time, and sold for about $10K (in 1978 dollars). It featured a new "gadget" called "touch tempo" (the gold plate on the right side panel - lower keyboard) whereby you could tap in your tempo (4x) and the organ would match that tempo.

  • @xyBoyMusic
    @xyBoyMusic 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    You so awesome James! :)

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    That guy in the mirror watching you. Is he the cameraman or is he the thrift store guy making sure you don't mess up his paycheck?

  • @garrywatters4456
    @garrywatters4456 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My dad worked for Hammond UK and we had one of those exact models in the front room back in 1977.

  • @johnthorn7989
    @johnthorn7989 5 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Believe or not I have one in my living room in Little River, SC. Most of it works well. I think I paid about $1300.00 for it 15 or 20 years ago. Just about impossible to have it serviced.

  • @pellebjurman
    @pellebjurman 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Massive large Hammond organ 👍🎹

  • @thomwilliamson3802
    @thomwilliamson3802 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I see these vintage Hammonds and other brands at thrift stores and EstateSales quite often and always cheap. If someone has some technical background and can fix them, they are a good deal. Finding a technician that can fix them is hard.

  • @eyesontheprize6637
    @eyesontheprize6637 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I would have to bring this home when my husband was away on a trip or something LOL. There would definitely be a lot of head shaking when he got back.

  • @zeusincoming282
    @zeusincoming282 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Sometimes there is a Switch you have to hit to change from Draw bars to Waterfall controls.

  • @danstephensen9032
    @danstephensen9032 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I just picked up THREE Hammond X-66 s. Out of 3 hopefully I can get ONE good one out of it. Also got 3 Tone Cabs out of it. ALL FREE.
    I gave one to a church already because they have 2 (not working). One has been shipped to San Diego to a guy who actually enjoys fixing them.
    Anyway, my Twin bro and I now have matching Hammonds and someday will get them working. Also have a ancient hammond Collonade working.
    Great Vids. And Great Skills, Young Man.

  • @mrwest5552
    @mrwest5552 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I enjoy watching as a "save the machines" enthusiast. 📸

  • @laddy819
    @laddy819 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This organ is the Hammond Concord. I call it the organ of the 70s. The first time I saw this organ was at a church in Columbus, Ohio and I thought it was the neatest thing with the silver pedals.
    In the 80s Hammond came out with the Hammond Elegante which is the organ of the 80s. Hammond Concords and Elegantes have similar sounds and extras.

  • @remaxjdk
    @remaxjdk 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I forgot to mention, the tabs/switches above the drawbars on the left side (blue, white, tan, pink, yellow, red) may work perfectly. James didn't realize you have to have the first of the black preset keys (immediately to the left of the white/black regular keys) depressed to activate these sounds. They can be combined with one set of the drawbars. It's an easy mistake to make. The piano solo tab overrides anything on the upper manual when depressed. Aso, these colored tabs have a 2nd voice that is activated by depressing another tab at the far right side of the tabs called "second voice". It changes the "plunk" on the harpsicord into a violin, other sounds in to saxophones, or trumpets, etc. When you use the violin with a Vibrato, it's hard to tell from a real violin. Lots of cool stuff on there if you know how to turn it on.

  • @joshuaweasenforth7757
    @joshuaweasenforth7757 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great share & info add from the comment thread. Thanks.

  • @PastorCharlesReidJr
    @PastorCharlesReidJr 5 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Hey!! I learned to play organ at my church in Virginia Beach on this EXACT Model! I know this organ LITERALLY inside and out! As I'm watching your video, I'm talking and telling you how to get things to actually work! (I know you can hear me! LOL). Leslie Chorale DOES actually SLOWLY slow down the Leslie, as a normal Hammond organ with a Leslie (the Leslie 710 was made to work with it!) , but you must have the Leslie tabs depressed. To use the percussion, on the upper manual, press the B preset. It is a great sounding Hammond, when you have an external Leslie (ECHO) It has a very good sound... It is a BOAT ANCHOR - VERY heavy... but overall a great instrument... Played it in the '80's - Anyhow.. thanks for sharing!! Hammond Concorde!!

    • @wendynicoll7763
      @wendynicoll7763 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I have this exact organ to give away for free! It’s perfect on the outside, needs a little wiring work fixed in the inside! Know anyone who might like it?

  • @wamgoc3637
    @wamgoc3637 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Non tone wheel hammonds are worth about that if they work perfectly. If you want to do some DIY troubleshooting for fun have at it, but otherwise I wouldn't put much money into it. Get a service manual. There is an organization for organ techs called MITA, but be advised they are not very DIY friendly. You will need a scope and some decent soldering skills to work on these, and a bench with a good supply and some fixturing helps a lot.

  • @PastorB1978
    @PastorB1978 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Played it when it was new and it was a lot of fun. I’m sure it’s still a great instrument to play.

  • @tommiller7166
    @tommiller7166 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have the nearly exact same organ, yours looks a bit newer, mine has a cassette recorder and clear plexiglass music rack. I just got done rebuilding it, and everything now works except the light for the pedals (don't look at them anyway). Replaced all the large electrolytic capacitors, many power transistors, one little diode it the power amp that caused the voice coil in the 15" speaker to burn out (replaced), and cleaned up and lubed the Leslie. Sounds good now. It was built in 1975. The instructions, schematics and pictures are online. Just google Hammond Concorde Service Manual. You can get a free PDF manual. Previous organ was Hammond H-100 with A-10 tone cabinet, sold to a church. Tom Miller, Phoenix, AZ.

    • @techy5025
      @techy5025 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Tom .. Mine is the early version also. Agree on the power supply. In addition to the caps, mine also had poor connections between the ground lug on several multi-lug terminal strips and the chassis causing hum. Also, due to aging of the resistor bias networks, the power amps were drawing to much idle current .. thus running too hot.
      Glad to hear others are getting these older organs going!
      Jim

  • @Knightrider1951
    @Knightrider1951 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    It's a Hammond Concorde Mid 1970's to early 80's. It was replaced by the Elegante which was in production until Hammond went out of business.

  • @mauriciotorres5875
    @mauriciotorres5875 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I am from Colombia South America, this organs were very popular here from the 50s into the early 90s. I own one of those Concorde the limited edition with lid. Love this things

  • @jamesbrogden1462
    @jamesbrogden1462 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As a Hammond organ service technician back in the sixties and seventies, I’ve encountered that noise problem before. It is likely caused by a diode in the power supply called a Zener diode, or avalanche breakdown diode, used as a voltage regulator. I’m sure they are still available, but you would need to know it’s specifications before replacing it. A service manual schematic would be immensely helpful, and I’m sure any tech that knows amplifiers and power supplies could find and replace the offending component. Good luck, and I think you got the deal of the century if you can get it repaired

    • @marcbrasse747
      @marcbrasse747 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Great tip. I advise to also replace all the capacitors in the same power supply. Furthermore cleaning all multiconnectors will often help, for instance to get the missing poly presets back. Loads of great old organs are begging for this kind of treatment before it is too late. Do however not postpone such jobs too long after starting to use them again. Otherwise the (re)new(ed) freindships might not last long.

  • @Texlex61
    @Texlex61 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the video. I recently acquired a Hammond H-100 and had no idea that a tone wheel generator was a thing that existed. This thing is so complicated! The inside was pretty clean, though all the galvanized bits had gray fur. I replaced the power supply filter caps with Sprague axials (and relocated them offboard), the power cord, and the 5AR4 rectifier tubes, added a 4A breaker switch, tested/cleaned/reinstalled all the tubes, replaced the 7591s with 2 new 7591A tubes, used my fingernail to gradually loosen a frozen section in the clockwork toner generator until the motor would spin it without help, added new oil, sprayed WD-40 from underneath to get rid of all the residual bearing noise, disconnected/cleaned/reconnected all the major accessible wiring connectors, etc. It seems to mostly work! There is more hum & hiss than there should be but I just obtained an original service manual, so I hope that will help chase those issues down. It seems a few of the drawbars do not appear to work and I understand that there is a way to shift the bus-bar and wipe the contacts and/or give them new contact surfaces. Any suggestions are welcome! Oh, I do not play the keyboards and my prior relevant experience is limited to tube guitar amps and effects and being mechanically intuitive.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      No WD-40.

    • @ward9457
      @ward9457 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      .
      Use "Singer(sewing machine) oil" instead..
      .

    • @danw1955
      @danw1955 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ward9457 ..or you can still buy the recommended tone-wheel generator oil on Amazon, believe it or not! www.amazon.com/dp/B00F8EYHL6/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_gq7HEbTCKQ42N

  • @zeusincoming282
    @zeusincoming282 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You have all the benefits of a B3 Hammond and then some on that Organ. Draw bars btw are equivalent to "Stops" on a Pipe organ! My thoughts.

  • @charleskesner1302
    @charleskesner1302 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very cool find.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว

      I hope it is able to find a good home.

  • @yackman4368
    @yackman4368 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    so cool, Wish I had a hammond

  • @garys8990
    @garys8990 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Looks like a late 70's Hammond, prior to the Elegante and Commodore models which were early to mid 80's models. I inherited an Elegante and use it for practice in my Band Mojo Jones'n. these are great organs.

  • @DiamondarBoss
    @DiamondarBoss 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    At first I thought this was a top gear episode from the title

  • @johnwalker6121
    @johnwalker6121 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bigger version of the Aurora 8100 spinet I had back in the late 70's, loved that organ. Notice it has an arpeggiator just above the lower manual, cool feature. You could play a lot of cool music with these models, although not a organ for the purist but a fun instrument. Would buy that it in a second and get it professionally restored.

  • @MrNetnomad
    @MrNetnomad 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I played a Lowrey of a similar vintage in the 80's that also had simulated Leslie. Mine needed an hour with a generic music store technician and all of it's problems were solved. They're pretty basic technology for anybody who has any experience fixing instruments. The problem is that the wiring is very thin and sometimes the soldering is not as strong as it should be. They're quite easy to fix. Not sure I'd want to.
    As for "rare" I know 2 or 3 places in Ontario that are full of these things. They can't give them away.

  • @jamesmarr8736
    @jamesmarr8736 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good pick up done good

  • @Silverado1st
    @Silverado1st 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great vid! Happy to see a review of the old electric organs. My Dad put together an old Heath-Kit Thomas organ back in the 60's and saddly was ruined while sitting outside in the weather 6 years ago :( but that one had such meaning for me as a kid, great memories and loved playing it, I drove 1800 miles to northern Kentucky to pick one up I purchased off ebay. Turned the trip into a little vacation =) Was well worth it to have one in the house again. Wow you've been making videos for just ages! Looking forward to watching more. All the best to ya and keep up the great work!

  • @bobbeaumont324
    @bobbeaumont324 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice self made piece and demonstration.

  • @marciethomas7371
    @marciethomas7371 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If I had to guess, the noise was from the Lesly(sp) speaker. While I was in Ohio in the 72 time frame I would rebuild the scanner in about one or two hours instead of sending it back to Hammond. I never worked on this model.

  • @adrianapartida5888
    @adrianapartida5888 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    The guys it the computer is staring in my soul

  • @gregtaylor9270
    @gregtaylor9270 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It's a Hammond Concorde 2300 series. You have there a model 2307 with a contemporary cabinet. I have model 2312 which has the same electronics but has a more traditional cabinet styling. I used to sell Hammond organs and would occasionally give concerts for local organ clubs. The Concorde is a great organ. It has a really gutsy, rich sound especially when played through an external Leslie speaker such as a two-channel model HL722 or 715. I have mine hooked up to a four-channel model 740; however, two of the channels are unused. The B3 is a great organ too, but it has a different tonal profile. The B3 has more of an "edgy" sound that's great for today's gospel, jazz, and rock whereas the Concorde has a rounder, more theatrical/pop organ tonal profile. As others have mentioned, you'll probably need to clean the edge connectors on the circuit boards and will need to replace some capacitors to get rid of the hum. I love the additional percussion harmonics available on the Concorde (the blue tabs). Most organs including the B3 only had 2nd or 3rd harmonics. Try these jazz registrations on the B preset on the upper manual: 88 800 0000, Percussion Fast, 3rd harmonic, Leslie Upper, Leslie Chorale. Now try the same registration except use 3rd and 8th harmonics. Then try the same except use 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th harmonics. There are lots of other possibilities also since the Concorde has sustain which isn't available on a B3: Swiss bells, vibraphone, and other cool effects.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Greg Taylor,
      Thank you for all of that insider information.

    • @dadautube
      @dadautube 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @ Greg Taylor: an impartial comment with great info on both this great gem and the B3 at last, unlike some other people bashing it totally! i'm sure you know very well what you're talking about sir! many thanks. :-)

  • @organist660
    @organist660 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    rhumba begiene is a cool latin sound. I use it often in my music lessons. they are some of the latin sounds.

  • @denshi-oji494
    @denshi-oji494 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I miss my Model G that I had for a few years. The model G was a great Tone-Wheel organ from WWII era, It was the same as the Model D with a second tone wheel generator for chorus effect, (NO VIBRATO SCANNER, just much cooler, in my opinion, chorus), but with a more basic cabinet, and with carrying handles on the sides. Yes handles. It was built and sold to the US government for use in military service at the time. This video made me think of it though it is nothing like this organ. This organ could be repaired, it obviously has some circuit boards that need work, hopefully all the boards are all still in it.

  • @ivanwashington3186
    @ivanwashington3186 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    a somewhat rare working specimen from back in the day, I sure do hope it gets the TLC it deserves and can make rich exciting music in a proper home.

  • @derekdauchan2741
    @derekdauchan2741 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I can imagine Timmy Thomas recording his biggest hits on this organ. "Why can't we live together" can be played easily on this.

    • @jimit6398
      @jimit6398 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Derek Dauchan Love that song! On my 70’s playlist

  • @shawnr26
    @shawnr26 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Those organs are notorious for having quirks and noises due to bad connections on various circuit boards. They can usually be cured by removing the connectors, cleaning them and readjust the prong to make a tighter fit at the circuit boards. There is actually a rotosonic Leslie built in the organ itself. It’s different than low rotor that you’ll find in a standard Leslie because there’s a 6x9 speaker in the drum itself. I tend to like these in a Leslie better because it has a stronger tremolo than a standard rotor with a woofer on top. The other reason is that rotosonic Leslie take longer to accelerate and decelerate than a traditional Leslie. There’s my rant about this Hammond Concord.

    • @techy5025
      @techy5025 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are right about all of this.

    • @eugenenelson8503
      @eugenenelson8503 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      shawnr26 Ive got this old one , it's called a Lowery, with two levels of keys with your level with more sound controls!
      its been with my mom for years, I tried to get it up an going, but no luck.
      I took the back off and looked at everything while it was plugged in, but nothing was running or humming.
      the power cord went to a big transformer, but could'nt tell if anything was on , any ideals what to do or is it junk?

  • @techy5025
    @techy5025 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Organs are sort of like typewriters. Nobody sells them anymore, few people still use them, and nobody repairs them or if they do it can be very expensive. Millions were sold, but someone told me that there is only one typewriter "fixer" left in San Francisco. If you like old organs, you have to be prepared to do simple troubleshooting and fixes yourself (or pay a lot of money). Naturally the B series organs are easier to fix as they have few connectors (if any) and only a few tubes ... and a lot less voices and features. However, as long as they are in demand and available (at some expensive price) there will be fixers.
    I don't understand the argument about the Concorde and later Hammond's weight. They have built in power amps and speakers and weigh about the same as a B3 which has none and requires an external tone cabinet. Organs are heavy! All the electronics in the Concorde including the keyboards probably weights....maybe 20 pounds.
    The Concorde has about 80 PC cards ... some of which are duplicates .. and maybe 3-400 feet of wiring ... not miles. I know because in replacing the phenolic boards, I replaced the wiring because the new connectors were different. Lots of short wires and connectors though!
    When it's fixed and working correctly, I think the Concorde and the later Elegante have a great sound, but I am at best a beginning organ player so I will leave the sound comparison between the LSI organs and the town wheel guys to the experts. The new Hammond Suzuki company has made two (3?) attempts to replicate the B3 sound using the latest electronics and the experts say they are not there yet. I think the problem is they can easily duplicate the tone sounds ... just not the defect sounds such as magnetic coupling in the townwheel pickups, foldover of the upper octave notes, key clicks, octave sounds coming in at different times depending on key force, and others which are all part of the B3 sound. Hammond fixed these defects in the Concorde and later organs, but maybe they were part of the "Hammond Sound" that people liked.
    Jim

    • @dadautube
      @dadautube 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @ techy5025: another great and well-put comment from you sir! good points also about the 'modern' Hammond-Suzuki thing and its great yet still lagging sound quality when compared to an original Hammond B3 ...
      yes, emulating the sound of an acoustic instrument such as the piano or guitar or violin etc via sampling tricks is NEVER the same as the original just when a synthetically made taste of orange or other fruits is never the same as the natural ones, is it?
      in case of the Hammond organs sounds, which was electronically produced already yet in an 'analog' manner, there were also a lot of mechanics and 'acoustics' involved as well, making it more like a fully accoustic instrument in comparison to present day 'digitally' emulated or simulated electronic instruments ... (compare that to photographs or movies made using film emulsion vs still or video cameras with a digital sensor ... true pros in the business still seek film and those who don't is mostly because they can't afford the higher costs of the film material and processing etc, otherwise ...)
      both and all methods are good in the end though, and needed as well, but sacrificing one for the other, especially throwing the acoustic/analog stuff away in favor of digital is a HUGE mistake imo!

  • @frederickfarias9515
    @frederickfarias9515 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    It's a Leslie speaker, and amp, that part of the organ is contained special device. Organ Model 2312M

  • @Chazmon_
    @Chazmon_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Bought a T series last year for $13. The ones with the tonewheels have somethin' special in them I swear.

  • @Makado14
    @Makado14 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    It's a Hammond Concorde. I had a 1971 Concorde, it was the stage model, which was black and had a white leather seat, chrome pedals, there are a few differences from the one you found here, this one I think must be just a little bit older than mine was. Mine didn't have the ABCD tabs on the top right, and the tempo section was set up better. I miss it to this day, haven't been able to find another one like it. Yes, I think that you found a steal!

  • @mercuryoak2
    @mercuryoak2 ปีที่แล้ว

    My late grandmother had something similar to this I think this was before she got her Lowry Heritage back in 1990 1991 about there was a cassette tape of a recording she did and it was some piece that she made up but never could play it again because she didn't remember what she did on the Hammond she had.

  • @dees3179
    @dees3179 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A really interesting beast. I thought it was going to eat your foot at one point when you were trying to figure out how to work that bit. Must be so frustrating to not know if there is something wrong or if you don't quite know how to make it work. Really enjoyed this vid. It sounded a lot like the nasty keyboard thing we had at home when I was teeny which I think was from the early 70s.

    • @ThePianoforever
      @ThePianoforever  5 ปีที่แล้ว

      I might be wrong, but I had a feeling it would be something simple.

    • @Rollinglenn
      @Rollinglenn 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      the sustain switch on the volume shoe (or pedal) is a momentary, not an on/off. You have to hold your foot against it for as long as you want sustain. Remove your foot and it stops. Think of it as a sustain pedal on a piano - it only works when you press it.

  • @davedeiler2072
    @davedeiler2072 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    looks good I like it

  • @timverellen8589
    @timverellen8589 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    The percussion tabs only work with the B preset down just like the B-3. The model # is located under the keyboards looking up (where you put your knees. 2300. the digits in the ones and tens place usually represent the wood finish (cherry, oak, walnut etc...) and the cabinet style (French Provential etc...)

  • @tonypet1518
    @tonypet1518 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for that

  • @danielkinney6325
    @danielkinney6325 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    LESLIE UPPER & LESLIE LOWER need to be pushed DOWN at all times for the LESLIE that is in the SIDE of the CABINET to work. Then you press LESLIE CHORALE for the SPEED TO SLOW DOWN. When you push that tab back up number 3, in that section it makes the LESLIE SPEED UP. We had a SIMILAR ORGAN but a lot newer in our old church.

  • @allicancan
    @allicancan 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very nice original composition! :D

  • @AceFurley
    @AceFurley 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I just saw a "never used =furniture" (ie: in perfect condition, besides just sitting & collecting dust since the mid 70's) model 231 2M early/mid 70's"Concorde" for free on craigslist!!! if i only had a truck and 4 big friends with the day off!!!! PS: yours looks like a newer (early 80s?) version of the "concorde" i was speaking of. Identical keys/stops/etc. only the body is different with plastic trim with the traditional dark wood.

  • @BruceTheSillyGoose
    @BruceTheSillyGoose 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    i hope that one found a forever home.

  • @johnw2026
    @johnw2026 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    That piano thing sounded like something out of an 80's video game, lol!

  • @denniscrabtree2170
    @denniscrabtree2170 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My cousin learned to play one of these in the 1960s!

  • @No_One_In_Particular_Today
    @No_One_In_Particular_Today 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Just guessing but I’m thinking the shiny pedals are actual wood with plastic caps to protect the wood, thus the plastic makes them look that way. Right?

  • @r50musa
    @r50musa 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wish this was for sale on my town. I'd take a chance on it. I used to have a Hammond Concorde and it had silver pedals. Cost over $4000.00 new. When we moved I couldn't take it. The NEW hammond XK3 is in the same price range , uses current tech and sounds amazingly like the B3

  • @urbannpa
    @urbannpa 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice!

  • @timothybedwards5440
    @timothybedwards5440 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love your original song

  • @robertthomas5906
    @robertthomas5906 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Check out the inside. If the leslie is still working, it's a pair of horns that rotates. Sits on top of a speaker. Turn on the switch and you should hear it spin up if it's still working. Press a key before you do it so you can hear what it does... if it still works. Very cool.

  • @donaldweil3361
    @donaldweil3361 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    It is from the 1970's I saw one at Lyon and Healy's in Chicago when I went to school at the ACM for organ. I looked it up and found it to be a X-66 introduced in 1967.

  • @edisonmirandilla7017
    @edisonmirandilla7017 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Double Keyboard Organ like this become famous in the Philippines probably in 1977 or 1979 with the Trademark TECHNICS & YAMAHA.It has both an excellent sound , with Double and Triple Layer-Keyboard models.I was a young teener who dreamed of playing this type of ORGAN, but unfortunately that time has no means of owning it.Now, I am blessed to own two of my dream Keyboards..

  • @alphasxsignal
    @alphasxsignal 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good price and nice rock and roll organ. Nice for the Rascals music.

    • @hartlandshoes
      @hartlandshoes 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I have the same organ, i played the leslie and Chorus together for another unique sound. Finally found a leslie to go with it, and now the leslie is plugged into the 9 hole connection on back of hammond organ.and sounds great. I dont have the switch, just the tab...slower activation between having leslie turn on and off

  • @armstronglance
    @armstronglance 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A steal at $300! I’d open it up & have it running 100% in no time.

  • @PsilentKnight19
    @PsilentKnight19 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ahhh yes...many a times I would go to a church and see these Concordes. I really did not enjoy playing on them, but didn’t mind since that would be the only thing they had

    • @lpsfantastic405
      @lpsfantastic405 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      There's a free Hammond like this one on Market Place on Facebook here in Houston. I would get it but I don't like the soynd or asthetics of this model.
      Besides I already have a L111 (gifted) a M111 ($150) and a M3 ($60). I don't even know how to really play 😁

  • @danielkinney6325
    @danielkinney6325 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I believe the BROWN colored Leslie tab is the one that TURNS off the SOUND UNDER NEATH the organ and gives you just THE SIDE LESLIE.

  • @Organgrinder1010
    @Organgrinder1010 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    ALAS! This lacks the additional drawbars that were on my H-112! The Septiéme 1 1/7' really made strings and reeds available from drawbars alone for the first time. Of course they were taken from the tempered tone wheels which made it NOT flat enough to really attach to the fundamental in perfect tune. I loved the instrument though it didn't love me back. Key contact problems were universal, even after a couple of treatments by my dealer. I didn't keep it much more than a year.

  • @Voltor07
    @Voltor07 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have a 1983 Composer, which was a console version of this. Tube amplifier, Leslie speaker, touch pad for activating the rhythm section, single finger chords, drawbars, and worst of all, NO TONEWHEELS. It's all solid state, though it probably is the best sounding transistor organ money can buy. I paid $200 for my Composer; $300 is probably a fair price for this.

  • @charliegilg5756
    @charliegilg5756 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    The model number is on the back, above the ventilated plywood. That looks like aa Aurora Elegante. I have an Aurora Classic from 1981, looks very similar. Your model is the top of the line for the time, I think. The popping and hissing is probably a bad capacitor in the power supply. Mine used to do that also. I got mine for $20 about 3 years ago, changed all the electrolytic caps, aluminum and tantalum. Fun job. Solved some problems, created others. These LSI ( Large Scale Integration ) organs are very persnicity.

  • @terrycollins5120
    @terrycollins5120 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    That noise is likely electronic components that are in decline; if you know a technician have him examine it. But only if you buy the organ. Capacitor failure is likely the cause of the noise.

  • @sandrasanders706
    @sandrasanders706 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    The Leslie... either it sounds like Booker T & the mg's or sounds like the black church.. I love that sound!