- Vox Continental
The Vox Continental is a
transistor -basedcombo organ that was introduced in 1962. Known for its thin, bright, reedy sound, the "Connie," as it was affectionately known, was designed to be used bytouring musicians . It was also designed to replace heavytonewheel organs, such as theHammond B3 .While this was not entirely accomplished, the Continental was used in many 1960s hit singles, and was probably the most popular and best-known
combo organ among major acts. Although phased out of production in the early 1970s, the organ still has a strong following to this day, and remains among the most sought-after of combo organs by enthusiasts.Description
The Continental came in two basic models, each with its own variations. The basic models were the single manual Continental, and the dual manual, which was known as the Vox Continental II in
England and the Vox Super Continental inItaly . For a short time single manual Continentals were built in theUSA at a very high production rate.The Continental was also very striking to look at, and had features not often found in keyboard instruments, both then and now. The most obvious being the reverse-coloured keys (black naturals and white sharps) similar to a
harpsichord . Then the chrome Z-shaped stand and bright red (in some models grey) top made for a very distinctive and handsome-looking piece of equipment. The Vox Continental used six slider-type, metered volume controls calleddrawbars instead of thestop-tab rocker switches seen on other combo organs. Two of the drawbars controlled thevoices (flute and reed tones), and three of the other four controlled thefootages (in reference to ranks of pipes on apipe organ , but were essentially successive octave controls; the lower the footage number, the higher the octaves were pitched), the last of the four controlling a mixture of high pitches. There was a single-speed, single intensityvibrato , but the Connie had no other special effects or bass notes. Its simplicity was appreciated by very many players.Single Manual Continentals
Although they all made the same tones and were similar in appearance, there were 4 different builds of the Vox Continental. The first were
UK models built by Jennings Musical Industries, or JMI, inDartford ,Kent ,England . LaterUK models were built by Vox Sound inErith ,Kent . TheUSA versions were built by Thomas Organ Company under license, and the Italian Models were built by EME under license. Italian models were distinguishable from UK and US models by the flimsy plastic keys, white and black (instead of red and cream) drawbars and the stand braces crossed. Some think that the sound of the Italian versions was a bit varying from its UK and US counterparts, and that UK and US Continentals, as far as appearance, sound, and overall quality, were essentially identical (even with some variations of the generator board configuration).Derivatives
In the late 1960s and the early 70s, various derivatives and variations came along, including the
Vox Jaguar ,Vox Corinthian and the last of the single manual Continentals, the Vox Continental '71.Dual Manual Continentals
The UK had the Continental II, and Italy had the Super Continental. Both had plastic keys and were available with and without percussion. Confusingly, the UK version with percussion (which only came with a Grey and not red top) was known as the "Super II".
The dual manual had its developments and variants. These included the Vox Continental 300, which introduced reverb and presets, and the Continental Baroque, which included internal amplification.
Usage
The instrument is commonly associated with
classic rock of the 1960s, being used by such artists asThe Doors . Famous songs that use the Continental include "House of the Rising Sun " byThe Animals , "Light My Fire " byThe Doors , "96 Tears " byQuestion Mark and the Mysterians , "In A Gadda Da Vida " byIron Butterfly , and "I'm Down " byThe Beatles . In addition to these 60s groups the Vox Continental played a large role in generating many of the keyboard sounds heard in 1970s and early 80s New Wave and Punk Rock. The Continental was used extensively by prodigy Steve 'Nieve' (aka Steve Nason), keyboard player forElvis Costello & The Attractions, and byMike Barson of2-Tone group Madness. Most recently in popular music culture, the organistRhys Webb , of the UK garage bandThe Horrors can be seen using the Continental, as can Sam Steinig of Mondo Topless andKenny Howes ofAtlanta psyche-pop groupOrange Hat .Two Vox Continental organs are seen in the promo video for "
Summer in the City " byThe Lovin' Spoonful , played byJohn Sebastian and bassist Steve Boone, although the signature keyboard line is played on a HohnerPianet . A Vox Continental is seen in use by Eric Harvey of Spoon in the music video for their songSister Jack .Links
*The history of the Vox Continental in detail: [http://www.reinout.nl/?page_id=7]
* [http://www.Combo-Organ.com Combo Organ Heaven]
* [http://www.voxshowroom.com Official Vox Site]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.