Oh my god -- how I could I ever think that this discussion would
never occur... But, oh well, I can give my personal contribution,
even I will have to rename the title of it a just little bit:
"A musician's, arranger's and organ grinder's
dream of an organ and it's scale"
I have to divide all of this into simple points, as probably nobody
will be ever be able to extract any useful information. :-)
Point 1: As a matter of fact, even though there are many songs and
possibilities for it, a normal monkey-organ will never be the perfect
solution. Why not, you will be able to see as of the next points:
Point 2: Even though chromatic seems to be luxurious, herein lies the
basic condition for the possibility of everything (!). To get this in
a harmony with cutting costs is hard -- you will need:
Point 3: Limitation of the scale -- you can have that as easy as just
taking one octave of everything.
Point 4: Combining: for taking a standard scale, it has to be combined
out of the ranks available. For a new scale, decisions have to be made
of how big you want this scale to be:
- one octave melody
- 2nd octave melody*
- one octave accompaniment
- one octave bass
- one octave countermelody
- another octave countermelody*
*) could be combined together
For MIDI-System every pipe accessible.
Point 5: MIDI-System also via direct input (keyboard)
Point 6: Percussion: has to be as "colourful" as already the
assortment of different sound-directions chosen for the different
ranks.
End-Product: An almost cathedral-sized organ, just portable and with
percussions and other elements not to be found in church-organs; 4-way
(or more) controlled, multipurpose concert organ.
*dreaming*
Well, so much to what I can say about it. Any volunteers for making
that as a present for me? ;-))
greetings by(e) InK - Ingmar Krause
P.S.:
Point 6 is about the most important point for building something
very special new. Point 2 is about all what you wanted to know about
a modern scale. Point 3 and 4 show how this is made affordable (under
limitation of Point 6 to the contrary, though). Compacting this is
like the achievement of the MPEG mp3 compression standard: very hard,
but worth it.
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