Brian Eno – Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster] album cover

Brian Eno – Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster]

Album 1974

The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 1974 album Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster].

Music from Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster]

Gear Used On Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster]

Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Brian Eno – Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster] (1974). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.

Keyboards and Synthesizers used by Brian Eno on Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) [2004 Remaster]

Organs

Farfisa Compact Duo

Avg price: $2,909.22

In this transcript of an interview from Electronic Soundmaker & Computer Music in October 1984 by Chris Everard, Eno reveals that he didn't at the time own many instruments. One, however, was "an old, old Farfisa organ - it used to belong to Pink Floyd."

More detail is provided in this interview with John Kavanaugh who purchased the instrument from Eno. He provides much more detail about its history, including the name of the model:

"Earlier on John told me about his fondness for vintage gear and old mics, but the best piece in his collection is a Farfisa Compact Duo organ which was once owned by the Pink Floyd. 'It came to me when it was being sold on the Internet by Brian Eno,' John explains. 'Brian Eno got it from a guy called Bill Kelsey who's now sadly dead, but his son Marlon still works for Eno. Bill was the Pink Floyd's sort of gadget boffin and he would make up bits of effects and bits of stuff for their live sets in the late '60s and early '70s. When he went to work for Eno, he took the organ with him. I've actually got a film of it with the Pink Floyd in the Syd-era, I've also got a couple of photos of it on stage. Most Farfisa organs were pale grey with a black band around the middle, but this one is charcoal grey, it's a sort of early model of the organ and it's quite distinctive for that reason. Eno used it on two of his albums, on tracks on "Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy" and "Another Green World". The organ comes with a certificate from Eno which says where it came from and now it has been restored and it works... The interesting thing is that the guy who fixed it found a plectrum inside. Syd wasn't much of a plectrum guy and Eno doesn't strike me as much of a plectrum guy. I can only assume that it may have come from David Gilmour. I also found on the front panel of the organ, on the little metal panel at the side of the lower manual, "accord to progression" written in pencil marks. I played that progression on another organ and thought it was "Saucerful of Secrets," the title for the second Pink Floyd album, but it was actually the prototype version of "The Massed Gadgets Of Hercules" and this was the organ part for the end of it which must have been penciled down there by Rick Wright when they were rehearsing the track in the first place. I remember I was home because I had lost my voice and wasn't feeling very well when I discovered this, but I felt like phoning everybody to tell them what I had found!'"