The Ultimate Fusion Keyboard Solo

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I paid hundreds of dollars (airplane ticket and lodging) to see this band back then. I did that because I know such things don't last more than a few years. To play like this you've got to be completely obsessed. Sooner or later you are going to want to have a larger life. Most people tire of touring too, The Rolling Stones notwithstanding.

However I don't recall Sonicbloom being anywhere near this good so I didn't really hit it. This may have been a couple of years later.

Hiromi was born in Hamamatsu (Port Pine), the headquarters of Yamaha music. They started out making organs, that's why their logo is three tuning forks. They heavily promote music education for the young and have made Japan the music capital of the world. Most people don't know that yet, but perhaps they will. The West has pretty much given up on popular music, opting for cheaply produced extruded musical Cheez-Whiz.
 
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This is pretty cool, it reminds me of Dick Hyman and his The Moog and Me album of the 1970s.

This is the title song:

 
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jedishrfu said:
This is pretty cool, it reminds me of Dick Hyman and his The Moog and Me album of the 1970s.

This is the title song:



They are similar. That effect is a triggered bandpass filter, sometimes called an envelope follower. This tune reminds of Baby Elephant Walk, which was a hit back then.

 
Yes they do sound similar. In the Moog case, the Whistler was Dick Hyman and the other eclectic sounds was a Moog synthesizer.

In the Henry Mancini Baby Elephant Walk, the instruments were orchestral piccolos to bass tubas. The piccolos for the baby and the tubas for the big Mama Elephant. The song was for the movie Hatari with John Wayne and Elsa Martinelli set in an African safari camp where the business was capturing wild animals for zoos.