Chasing the Dyno My Piano Sound Part .5 - Tri Chorus - Dyno My Roto

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  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • In this short series of videos I take a look at the Dyno My Piano sound and try to recreate that sound.
    In this part I try my preamp based on the Dyno My Piano circuit and apply a tri-chorus. I believe this combination is important to creating the Dyno My Piano sound.
    The tri-chorus is the Keeley Dyno My Roto, which appears to be based on the Dyno My Piano Branding, but there is one issue, this pedal is mono....
    I believe Dyno My Piano Tri-Chorus was stereo, so this is likely a different effect.
    To me, this combination sounds ok, but i think i like the ce-2 a little more, what do you think?
    I really enjoy the Dyno My Piano story and think they play an important part history of the Fender Rhodes. I enjoy the direction they took and the sound they created, I find it inspiration for creating my own piano sound.
    I am not affiliated with the Dyno My Piano facebook page, but I am looking forward to more updates at this page, do give it a follow, I am sure the information posted will be interesting and may help me recreate the Dyno My Piano sound.
    / dynomypiano
    There doesn't seem to be a lot of information out there on Dyno My Piano, I would love to learn more about it, so it you have any information, please do get in touch. I would really like to know what was in Dyno My Piano training.

Комментарии • 13

  • @NEALglotzt
    @NEALglotzt Год назад +5

    Love this Series! Youre a Legend for this Niche!

    • @deancoyle
      @deancoyle  Год назад +1

      Thank you. There isn't much information out there, so hopefully this helps more information surface. Glad you are enjoying it!

  • @gatosoul
    @gatosoul Год назад +1

    Gracias Dan ! cheers from Atlanta

  • @BMWproductionCo
    @BMWproductionCo Месяц назад +1

    Well, clearly Brent Mydland must have used a Dyno my Piano in the 80's, can't mistake that sound.

    • @deancoyle
      @deancoyle  Месяц назад

      Glad that helped - I must listen more to Brent!

  • @lundsweden
    @lundsweden Год назад +3

    Hi Dean, I believe a lot of stereo chorus units just spit a dry (unaffected) line out on one side, with the affected wet channel on the other (hard panned) side. I've tried this with mono pedals, and I find the result is pretty pleasing IMO.

    • @deancoyle
      @deancoyle  Год назад +1

      Good point! For some reason that didnt cross my mind, I will give that a go! Thank you.

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Год назад +1

      @@deancoyle I think I've lifted that tip from an old FutureMusic/Mixmag/SoundonSound kind of source. Its an old tip but gold! You can use it with just about any effect too, except maybe reverb!

    • @RocknJazzer
      @RocknJazzer Год назад

      The vintage dyno tri stereo chorus rack unit I had, going by memory, was true stereo output, ie each side had a separate distinct chorus output per side, so is not something you will get with the simpler wet/dry hard panned faked stereo method most basic choruses use. As to how far you want to go on your dyno journey, well you went farther than most and proved the magic sound is in the preamp mostly, so I think you reached the end, unless you want to spend big bux to get either a fulltone clone or an original. But there are many other cheaper multi mode true stereo choruses out there in pedals, in rack units, and plugins.

    • @lovecraftmusic8717
      @lovecraftmusic8717 Год назад

      Imo he could try a Boss Ce3 in mode B or even better a dc2 after the Keeley (both Boss pedals are true stereo, dry/wet on the Left, dry/wet on the right).

  • @progressox001
    @progressox001 Год назад +2

    Lovely Dyno my roto,very close sound to the Dytronics cs 5👍

    • @deancoyle
      @deancoyle  Год назад +1

      That good to hear, thank you for the feedback! It's interesting to hear it actually recreates the sound well.

  • @valeriy_madeko
    @valeriy_madeko Год назад

    Hi Dean! I liked it, you're super! Try to connect Chorus and Reverb together, I think it will turn out a cool effect. Well, it would be nice to hear how the Flanger will sound, the sliding effect and the richness of overtones brings goosebumps! P S it seemed to me that the key La # of the big octave is ringing, is that so? or was it my imagination? To create a stereo effect in the Crunch, several signal mixing options are used. In all variants, the raw signal goes to the output amplifier of the set-top box. In the simplest version, an inverting signal is used, and due to the operation of the delay line, this signal lags slightly behind the main one and gives volume to the sound. There is a more complex effect (which is used in the Chorus pedal CE 3-2) In it, the processed signal is alternately added to both channels using a built-in generator, this generator controls the delay line. I can send a diagram of this pedal, I assembled it, it sounds cool.