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Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - Nord Electro 2 Sixty-One Stage Piano/Organ

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List Price: $1,750.00
Our Price: $1,349.00
Your Save: $ 401.00 ( 23% )
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Nord
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Brand: Nord EAN: 0834035000106 Feature: Full polyphony Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Label: Nord Manufacturer: Nord Model: NE61 Publisher: Nord Special Features: Clavia's goal when developing the Nord Electro 2 was to create the best emulations of traditional electromechanical keyboard instruments on the market, and to make the instrument compact and lightweight. Nothing else. No brass banks, no orchestral sounds. No compromises. Just outstanding electromechanical keyboard sounds with true feel, from fast keyboard response to authentic sound. The organ in the Electro 2 is based on a digital simulation of the mechanical tone wheels of the B-3 organ. It of Studio: Nord
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Features
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Full polyphony 9 electric drawbars with memory functionality Effects: Presence (or Filter and Pickup selectors for the Clavinet D6 sound) Memory: 48 user memory locations (6 Banks of 8 Programs each) in which you can store complete setups, including instrument settings (organ/piano) and effects settings Included Accessories: Owner's Manual, Power Cord, Nord CD/DVD-ROM
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Editorial Reviews:
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The Nord Electro 2 is the next big step in the development of the Nord Electro series of stage keyboards. Among the features of the Electro 2 you'll find the new Mega Clavinet sound which offers all the filter and pick-up variations of the original Clavinet D6! This means that you'll be able to access no less than 60 + 4 different Clavinet D6 sounds in the Electro 2!Thanks to the remade piano sample playback engine, the polyphony for the piano sounds is now greatly enhanced. The new piano sample playback engine also made it possible for Nord to digitally model the sounds you get when you release keys on a piano instrument. For example, the Clavinet and the Wurlitzer have very characteristic key release sounds. In Nord Electro 2 this is very faithfully modeled. The new sample playback engine also allows for playback of stereo pianos. In the new factory sound library Clavia has included a great new Acoustic Grand piano - in stereo. The Electro 2 also features great new vintage-style effects in the Effects section. Nord has also beefed up the Overdrive distortion to sound more like an overdriven tube amplifier.Nord Electro 2 fully supports USB download of Nord Electro piano samples. Now you will be able to download new piano instrument samples using Nord's specially developed Electro Tool sample dump program for Mac and PC! Additional piano sounds are available on the CD-R that comes with the Nord Electro 2 and also for download at www.clavia.se - free of charge! More...
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: The best 17 lbs. money can buy... Comment: For the gigging keyboardist, the Electro 61 falls somewhere between a Godsend and a no-brainer. It's hard to avoid hyperbole when discussing this instrument, but anyone who has toted a Hammond rig and a Wurlie and a controller and peripherals and every other blasted thing will get my drift. For 29 years, I've been condemned to driving a cargo van full of vintage keys which weren't designed to leave the living room in the first place. I've herniated myself in the process, and was almost killed in a rear-end collision that flipped my 'B' upside down. I have made every effort to 'scale down' -- Korg CX3, Micro B, Roland VK7, Oberheim, Hammond XM3, and oddball stuff. All of the aforementioned fell woefully short of Hammond heaven, and of course, didn't offer any EP features or anything else.
The buzz about the Nord was intriguing, so I checked one out at a local store. Typically, the young, cooler-than-thou clerk could barely get the thing to power up, and I was pretty much left to navigate on my own. But five minutes on the Electro made me a believer (of COURSE I ordered one online -- any dope on the floor of a music store who can't get a keyboard that produces five sounds to work doesn't get his commission from me).
Here goes (note -- run this guy stereo, even if ya have to buy a little PA to do so): the Hammond end of things is simply exquisite. I did a little EQ stuff (the Electro features EQ and presence knobs on the dashboard. What a concept! You know, you can actually tweak your sound during performance...), rolled back the key click, and entered my own registrations. Fat, juicy, and soulful. Big, even in the high harmonics. Not a trace of cheese. Outlandish chorus. Completely persuasive percussion. The best Leslie ever, and I don't mean 'pretty good.' It sounds like the real deal. I personally don't have an issue with the 'draw-buttons' and I like controlling the Leslie speed via footswitch. The last thing I want is another broken bakelite switch hanging pitifully on my 'board.
Rhodes: ya want Richard Tee? Yassah. "Just the Way You Are?" (you'll actually want to play the old warhorse) -- roger roger. Steely Dan ala Victor Feldman and/or "Nightfly" stuff? Yes jones. Through the Electro, younger players might actually discover what a Rhodes really sounds like. Twenty years of screaching over-cranked synth knockoffs did the Rhodes sound no favors.
Wurlie: intitially, I couldn't find one quite 'mean' enough, but five minutes with 'presence' did the trick. Early Ray, in a big way. A little tremolo and it's Mussel Sholes central. Just like my 200. Plays like it too. Light, but CONFIDENT feeling.
Clavs: good grief. Perfect.
CP80: Back in the day, I wanted one desperately. But, of course, like every thing else back in the day, I coudn't afford one. Now I OWN one. I LOVE it. Newbies probably won't 'get' the CP80, but us old timers will have our fun.
Piano: contrary to most opinions, I think the piano is very good. I don't like it as well as my Kurweil 1200 Pro I, but it's entirely usable. I re-EQed it, rolling off some of the not-so-pleasant highs. Prior to a gig recently, I played some standards using the piano sound. I was testing the waters to see if the relatively short keyboard and on-board piano would work for jobbing. Absolutely. It won't cut stride, but an Evans-esque approach is A-OK.
Conclusion: the Electro 61 is hands-down the most impressive and exciting 'keyboard' I've ever owned, and I have had a ton of stuff. Unlike a synth, it is designed for the player to make music on it. In that sense, it is a bonafide musical instrument.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Sounds great! BUT... Comment: The big but. If you've ever played a real B-3 you may well be in for a disappointment. While the sound is beyond belief, the lack of real drawbars is Nord's downfall. You loose the ability to instictively "fly" your hand up to change settings. Nord's drawbar "buttons" are far from instant, hard to control, and have top be watched in order to get the setting you want. Also, whils the Leslie is the best simulator I've ever heard (2 amps for best results. I use Genz Benz UC4's)you're gonna miss the half moon Leslie switch. I had many B-3's and I have two Nord 61's. Some compensation comes from the other sounds, but much is lost in the transition from the real instruments. I've also had many Wurlys and Clavs. Mostly you loose the ability to control attack. Are they worth it? Well if you can't have the real thing(s)...YES. The keys seem to break at the back for no reason at all, so be prepared to pay $10 per replacement. (Nord: Please use better material)The up side is great sound and portability. Nord: Build a dual manual with real drawbars, and a half moon switch and you'll have accomplished the impossible. Note the four stars... It was almost three. At this point, would I part with mine? NO! I'm too old to lug two amps, a B-3, a Leslie, and two other boards. You should also buy ONLY an Ultimate support single post type stand. Just do it. Could the Nord 61 be better? Most certainly, but nothing else is. Best B-3 sound short of a B-3. P.S. Nord 61s ARE "keyboards". I really miss "riding" my B-3...
Customer Rating:      Summary: Retro Raver Comment: If you like the organ work on Santana's Abraxas, or the cool sounds of Fender Rhodes on Bitches Brew, then you want to try out this board. You also get Clavinet (Superstition), CP-80 (In your eyes.) and Wurlitzer (LA Woman).
The keyboard is quite comfortable (except maybe for the competent, but uninspiring accoustic piano samples), and the effects are spare , but of high quality, especially the tube overdrive and a fantastic leslie.
Clavia offers a few extra voice samples which can be downloaded free from their site and inserted by USB onto the board. (Speaking of retro, though, if you are using Mac, you have to dig up OS 9; it won't run on X.) I only wish that these sly swedes would loosen up a little bit and consider sampling mellotron or maybe some arp strings.
Still, I can't get enough of those cool Rhodes tones, thrashing and chiming about. This thing is a blast.
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