One thing that has bugged me since I first got a VHS copy of Pompeii 20+ years ago... what is the weird synth effect David is seen using in the studio footage?
https://youtu.be/0hz9c0T6lZY?si=kYuHtzOvj0f0fxyS
From 3:50 onwards. He is using his Bill Lewis guitar with no obvious outboard/hexaphonic pickup. Somehow his guitar is providing an accurate control voltage to two oscillators, tuned a fifth apart. There is a slowly sweeping resonant filter in the signal as well. This seems quite advanced tech for 1972; especially using a regular guitar with no special pickup or other circuitry.
I don't hear this effect on the DSOTM album, any subsequent album or live show. It could just be the VCS-3 synth(s) in action, but passive guitars put out small voltages and I've never read or heard of a VCS-3 being driven from a guitar. Bands like Hawkwind and King Crimson (check out Groon on the album Earthbound) processed audio with VCS-3 synths downstream (after the amps, speakers etc) but didn't directly control the oscillators with control voltages from regular instruments.
Any ideas?
https://youtu.be/0hz9c0T6lZY?si=kYuHtzOvj0f0fxyS
From 3:50 onwards. He is using his Bill Lewis guitar with no obvious outboard/hexaphonic pickup. Somehow his guitar is providing an accurate control voltage to two oscillators, tuned a fifth apart. There is a slowly sweeping resonant filter in the signal as well. This seems quite advanced tech for 1972; especially using a regular guitar with no special pickup or other circuitry.
I don't hear this effect on the DSOTM album, any subsequent album or live show. It could just be the VCS-3 synth(s) in action, but passive guitars put out small voltages and I've never read or heard of a VCS-3 being driven from a guitar. Bands like Hawkwind and King Crimson (check out Groon on the album Earthbound) processed audio with VCS-3 synths downstream (after the amps, speakers etc) but didn't directly control the oscillators with control voltages from regular instruments.
Any ideas?
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