rob aylestone
Moderator
The thing with trying to create an organ sound with a different class of instrument is that you have two separate things to consider. The sound. You can produce an organ sound (piano, or even a saxophone), but you have to play them differently, or they sound wrong. A violin can play or off the exact note, they start notes differently to a key on an instrument. They can increase in volume after you start the note. Most importantly, you can go to one note without stopping the previous one.
To achieve a realistic organ melody on an organ sound, played on anything other than keys on a keyboard, it is very hard. Your standard of musicianship has to go up quite a few notches with your playing technique changing to match the new instrument’s demands.
I have a MIDI guitar with a synth attached. It has piano, organs, strings, synths, but despite some being very good Roland sounds, playing it, expecting to sound like the name in the display, is quite difficult. Plus, you have to cope with miss-triggering.
Sometimes your fingers make noises that are mistakes not notes. The gizmos dont know. If you treat them totally as an effect you can have great fun, but i have never been successful trying to be realistic.
				
			To achieve a realistic organ melody on an organ sound, played on anything other than keys on a keyboard, it is very hard. Your standard of musicianship has to go up quite a few notches with your playing technique changing to match the new instrument’s demands.
I have a MIDI guitar with a synth attached. It has piano, organs, strings, synths, but despite some being very good Roland sounds, playing it, expecting to sound like the name in the display, is quite difficult. Plus, you have to cope with miss-triggering.
Sometimes your fingers make noises that are mistakes not notes. The gizmos dont know. If you treat them totally as an effect you can have great fun, but i have never been successful trying to be realistic.