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Anna aka MissLucifer uses Arturia MiniFreak Anna aka MissLucifer uses Arturia MiniFreak

The enclosed image shows Anna aka MissLucifer using the Arturia MiniFreak.

Anna aka MissLucifer's' Arturia MiniFreak
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Anna aka MissLucifer uses Korg Monologue Black Anna aka MissLucifer uses Korg Monologue Black

Anna, also known as MissLucifer, uses the Korg Monologue Black, as evidenced by the provided image showing her with the gear.

Anna aka MissLucifer's' Korg Monologue Black
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Anna aka MissLucifer uses Access Virus B Anna aka MissLucifer uses Access Virus B

The enclosed picture clearly shows Anna aka MissLucifer using the Access Virus B.

Anna aka MissLucifer's' Access Virus B
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Axel Ermes uses Korg Micro X Axel Ermes uses Korg Micro X

An on-stage photograph provides evidence that Axel Ermes uses the Korg Micro X synthesizer.

Axel Ermes's' Korg Micro X
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Axel Ermes uses Korg microKORG XL Music Synthesizer Axel Ermes uses Korg microKORG XL Music Synthesizer

Axel Ermes is confirmed to use the Korg MicroKORG, as evidenced by the on-stage picture provided.

Axel Ermes's' Korg microKORG XL Music Synthesizer
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Paul Dillon uses Boss CE-2 Chorus Paul Dillon uses Boss CE-2 Chorus

Paul Dillon is confirmed to use the Boss CE-2 Chorus, as listed on The Cassandra Complex gear page.

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Paul Dillon uses Carlsbro Suzz Paul Dillon uses Carlsbro Suzz

Paul Dillon is confirmed to use the Carlsbro Suzz, as listed on The Cassandra Complex gear page, authored by Rodney.

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Paul Dillon uses Casio Casiotone MT-40 Paul Dillon uses Casio Casiotone MT-40

Paul Dillon is confirmed to use the Casio Casiotone MT-40, as it is listed on The Cassandra Complex gear page, authored by Rodney.

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Andy Booth uses Heet Sound EBow Plus Andy Booth uses Heet Sound EBow Plus

Andy Booth is confirmed to use the Heet Sound EBow, as it is listed on The Cassandra Complex gear page maintained by rodney.

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user rodney418

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Ben Eller uses Fender 75th Anniversary American Ultra II Telecaster Electric Guitar - Liquid Gold Ben Eller uses Fender 75th Anniversary American Ultra II Telecaster Electric Guitar - Liquid Gold

In an Instagram reel, Ben Eller is seen using a Fender 75th Anniversary American Ultra II Telecaster Electric Guitar in Liquid Gold. He captioned the post: "The new @fender 75th Anniversary American Ultra II Tele is a slice of FRIED GOLD!!! This thing just arrived on my doorstep and I am in love. Photos DO NOT do this finish justice, it’s absolutely amazing in person. It’s more of a bronze-y gold with a slight green chameleon effect. This thing plays like the WIND and sounds killer. Had to bust out one of my favorite Vito Bratta classics, this is the solo from Wait by White Lion. Playing through the @synergyamps Marshall JMP module. Get into it! Everybody needs a Tele! Huge thanks to the fine folks at Fender and @timhillierbrook for making magic happen."

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user goodsoup

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Dolores O'Riordan uses Yamaha APX600 Dolores O'Riordan uses Yamaha APX600

In a live video from October 29, 1993, featuring The Cranberries' debut appearance on US television, Dolores O'Riordan can be seen playing a Yamaha APX600. This performance, uploaded by steelygray on YouTube, includes the song "Linger" from the album "Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?"

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user ianm_sings

ianm_sings

Pablo Galán uses Rode K2 Pablo Galán uses Rode K2

Pablo Galán confirmed the use of the Rode K2 microphone in the recording of his Spanish version of Lady Gaga's "The Cure," as detailed in the video description on his YouTube channel. The microphone was connected to an Avalon 737 and the audio was converted using a Focusrite 18i8 second generation.

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user pablogalanmusic

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Pablo Galán uses Slate Digital ML-1 Pablo Galán uses Slate Digital ML-1

Pablo Galán used the Slate Digital ML-1 microphone, as confirmed by his own statement in the YouTube video "Dragon Ball GT Opening Español Studio Version 2024."

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user pablogalanmusic

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pablogalanmusic added artist Pablo Galán to Equipboard pablogalanmusic added artist Pablo Galán to Equipboard

2 months ago

Pablo Galán

Pablo Galán

Singer, Composer

Lennart Bossu uses Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus Lennart Bossu uses Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus

In a photo captured by Peter Hutchins on Flickr, the Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus amplifier can be seen behind guitarist Lennart Bossu, providing clear evidence of its use.

Oathbreaker - Lennart Bossu, Gilles Demolder, Caro Tanghe & Wim Coppers
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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user spellbound1

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spellbound1 added their gear photo spellbound1 added their gear photo

Setup

#pedal #guitar #amplifier #Bass

Total setup price: $2,166.49 View breakdown

2 months ago

simon_j_dodd reviewed PogoLab Analog Chorus simon_j_dodd reviewed PogoLab Analog Chorus

2 months ago

Sugoi!

What a time to be alive: Even the cheap Chinese knockoffs are amazing. This is a Boss CE2 in all but name. It sounds fantastic. It retails for under 25 landed. Buy it now.

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Wendy Carlos uses Gulbransen KS20 MIDI Adaptor Wendy Carlos uses Gulbransen KS20 MIDI Adaptor

In an article on Carlos's official website, Carlos explains the 2001 installation of a KS20, including photographs and a companion article for setting up the device.

Excerpt from "Something Old -- Something New" by Wendy Carlos (2004)

In the summer of 2001 I wondered if there was a way to add on some kind of MIDI pedalboard, even a small one, so that I might be able to practice some actual organ parts with it. I spent several weeks searching for something I could afford, and tried out a few of the options in the local music stores. Um. What I learned was that there were two distinct camps. You could find a few reasonable one octave pedalboards which supported velocity sensing, and some other convenience features from MIDI that would be depressing to give up. A few were rather flimsy affairs, and jumped around the floor when played briskly. Yuk. The other camp supported what you'd need for an electronic organ: standard organ pedalboard size, but no velocity or aftertouch, no program changes, or customization, other things I was unwilling to put up without. I also didn't have the tools, experience and parts to build my own from scratch, as Clark had. Nutz.

Then I remembered that my acoustic piano up in the front of the loft has a retrofit Gulbransen optical pickup system. It's a wonderful device, and has been dependable and powerful and most welcome. Unfortunately, it's not in the studio proper, where I do my composing and recording. So it's gotten less use that I hoped for originally, when it was given to me by some generous people at the company. I wrote again to my contact there, Jack Butler. Did they have any devices that could turn an old organ pedalboard into a good MIDI controller?

The answer I got back from Jack was sorta no and sorta yes. No -- they did not have an actual pickup device for pedalboards. Yes, they did have a solution that might work. One of their engineers had come up with an "off the record" modification to their KS-20 unit recently. It was one of those amusing stories, his daughter was a church organist, and had started to use a pair of Gulbransen pickups beneath the keys of the manuals, so she could save her performances and improvisations each week via a MIDI sequencer. Ah -- but the pedalboard -- what to do for that?! Was there any way her engineering dad could figure out to reproduce those notes as well?

The solution he devised was extremely clever and logical. I'd have tried cutting up a keyboard strip and mounting the individual note pickups along a wood strip, one pickup beneath each pedal key. Wire them together again. That ought work. But it was a lot of risky work, tearing apart the printed circuit boards like that, one might damage the whole thing. Instead he'd taken a full 88-note strip, disassembled it into the four 22-note boards that make it up, and then mounted them on wood supports in four overlapping segments beneath the pedalboard keys. There was at least one pickup on every note. THEN -- you'd tell the onboard computer what sensors were going to be played by which notes and "map out" the rest (many pickups fell in the cracks, only about a third would be useful, due to the vastly different note-spacings). The procedure was simple -- just play the pedals one at a time slowly, from lowest to topmost note. And a new software subroutine he added did the rest. Damn clever.

Jack suggested I might consider this kit, even though the company did not formally "support" organ pedal installations. Other customers already were using it that way, though, and all reported good to excellent results. I decided to give it a try, since my old and not often used Yamaha Electone E-5 organ has a very study and attractive 25-note pedalboard. If I could retrofit the new pickup boards beneath this, I might be in business, and it would cost a lot less than a new similar sized board, even forgetting for a moment about velocity and pressure sensing (btw- both poly and channel pressure are supported by Gulbransen -- hey!). Yes, it would be a compromise, the E-5 doesn't use a full AGO 32-note set of pedals, but the smaller flat but radiating 25-note version made popular on Hammond and other electronic organs. Since I'm no organist, and seldom would need the extra top seven notes, this seemed a reasonable place to start.

I could always change over to an AGO size later. With the limited space I have, and the clumsiness of using a computer beside the rig if the pedals sat over 10" above floor level to each side, I'm not convinced that the purist approach would be preferable. Concave is easier to play than flat, but for 25 notes the maximum difference is less than an inch (and Ethel Smith managed pretty dern well). Shux. I ordered the KS20 installation kit Butler suggested. When unpacked I found one long steel supported pickup strip, which I placed on top of the new K2600's keyboard to examine closely:

[https://www.wendycarlos.com/wurlynew/striptop.JPG] K2600 wi Gulbransen

The kit included sundry connecting cables, mounting hardware, complete instructions, plus the brains of the pickup system, the KS20 control box shown next (also resting on top of the new 2600), below left. It's a well-engineered device, I've grown very fond of it since using it. If you look closely at one end you'll get a good idea of the elegant way the sensor strip is arranged, below center. Those precision optical moving vanes resemble the famous Loch Ness monster prankster photo from 1934. (Robert Wilson, the prankish London physician and coperpetrator with Wetherell, later confessed in great detail, like the similar "crop circle" partners in crimininy sakes, Bower and Chorley. But by then many had grown too fond of the hoax to admit they'd been cleverly duped. Think also of Conan Doyle, far too proud and gullible to admit he'd fallen for two schoolgirls' cutout "fairies".) The manufacturer impishly calls them "Nessies." Unlike the modeling clay (plasticine) long neck and head on a toy submarine of that well circulated image (below right), the Gulbransen "Nessies" are not a "fake in the lake." So reports of seeing and touching them on a sensor strip count as verified "Encounters of the Tangible Kind" (wink nudge say no more)...

[https://www.wendycarlos.com/wurlynew/KS20.JPG] Gulbransen KS20

[https://www.wendycarlos.com/wurlynew/sensideCUsml.jpg] Some Real "Nessies"

[https://www.wendycarlos.com/wurlynew/nessfakesml.jpg] A Fake "Nessie"

[...]

NOTE: There may be other musicians who will want to assemble a similar MIDI pedalboard custom installation. I can definitely recommend the Gulbransen KS20 as a solution with a great deal of elegance, power and little compromise. (The company now has a new name, MIDI 9, a new website, new lower prices, and has replaced the KS20 with a new line of controllers, some of which provide for organ pedal installations -- yeay!) You will have to find a physical set of organ pedals from one of several sources (even eBay occasionally has these on auction), and be willing to attempt some modest woodworking assembly on your own, as the factory DOES NOT supply nor support custom pedalboard installation kits. If you do go ahead, I've saved a set of instructions that should be studied when you initialize your unit to operate with whatever pedals you choose (12 to 32-notes AGO or more). You can construct a full MIDI organ, or head in more innovative directions. Please note, these were written for my own purposes only, but I will post them here for curious, enterprising musicians to print out and refer to, if you wish. It makes initialization a straightforward series of steps, avoiding several pitfalls of this nonstandard application. Initializing Instructions for Pedalboard use of the KS20 HERE. (Opens a new window you may print from. Close that window, as with any of the photos here, to return here.)

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2 months ago

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This submission was made by Equipboard user eyeseeofficial

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