Dual-manual Modelled Combo Organ
Reviews : Keyboard
Korg's CX3 digitally modelled combo organ
went down a storm when we reviewed it some two years ago. Now it's time
to find out if the dual-manual BX3 is twice as good.
Photos: Richard Ecclestone
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I have known fellow Sound On Sound writer
Nick Magnus since the phrase 'burning bush' was a biblical reference,
not an ambition. And, for the past few years, we have had a little
telephone ritual whereby he telephones me and asks "How is one?", to
which I reply, "Not as good as two". Silly, I know, but such is the
stuff of human existence. This particular observation, too, is amply
confirmed by the Korg BX3, the dual-manual version of the Korg CX3 combo
organ that I reviewed in Sound On Sound's January 2001 issue.
The sound generator in the BX3 is identical to that of the CX3. So,
rather than repeat much of my detailed review of the CX3, I have limited
myself to presenting an overview here. If you would like more detail,
please refer back to the original review as mentioned above.
Organ Donation
Despite its elegant 'vintage' appearance, everything
about the BX3 is digital, with a set of algorithms that emulates a
tonewheel sound generator, and yet more algorithms to recreate the
various effects that are so crucial to the classic Hammond/Leslie sound.
The basic voicing emulates that of the B3, C3 and A100 models, but with
many additional facilities that you can access via a simple editing
system. These include 'vintage' and 'clean' tonewheel settings, leakage,
key click, percussion settings, chorus/vibrato, amplifier models, EQ,
reverb, the rotary speaker effect, and a whole bunch of other parameters
that allow you to craft the sound in exactly the ways you want. You are
not starved of choices: for example, the Leslie emulation offers no
fewer than 17 parameters that allow you to set up and 'mic' the virtual
speaker in almost any way that you could set up and mic the real thing.
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Like the CX3, the BX3 also offers 'EX' mode, which
extends the traditional Hammond voicing by adding a further four
drawbars to the sustained sound, plus five new percussion footages. I
reported in 2001 that these options improve the basic Hammond
'algorithm' and I see no reason to change my view. The BX3, like its
smaller brother, sounds superb in EX mode, especially when you play it
as a church or gospel organ rather than as a rock & roll instrument.
The only drawback here is that you lose the ability to place different
registrations on each keyboard. EX mode places heavy demands on the
sound generator, so one sound is all you'll get. On the plus side, the
BX3 can even act as a touch-sensitive MIDI controller.
But let's move on to the nitty-gritty. How does the BX3 perform next to the real thing?
Control Zone
When it comes to reviewing Hammond emulators, I'm
very fortunate. I simply place the instrument in question next to my
mint, 38-year-old A100 and Leslie 147, hook up a pair of speakers, and
away I go!
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Although in isolation the BX3 appears much like a
vintage Hammond, it's surprising how modern it looks when placed
alongside its forebear. There's something distinctly 21st century about
the one, and equally mid-20th century about the other. The Korg is the
smaller of the two, being four inches narrower and a smidgen less deep
from front to back. The narrowness is, in part, a consequence of the
length of the keyboards: while the Hammond boasts a pair of six-octave
manuals (the lowest octave of each being the twelve presets for that
manual), the Korg sports dual fiveoctave manuals with a small control
panel to the left of each.
There are other differences, too. For example, the
Korg has just two sets of drawbars above and behind the upper manual,
whereas the Hammond has four. But, bearing in mind that these sets of
drawbars were the only easily 'programmable' memories on a Hammond, and
the Korg has 128 of those, I'd have to say that the loss of the
duplicate sets is not a problem. The space thus liberated is taken up by
the screen and programming controls.
To the far right of the main control surface, you'll
find the percussion controls on both instruments, and these perform in
exactly the same fashion on each. To the left, there are the
chorus/vibrato controls, and these too are the same on both organs. The
only difference here lies in the volume control to the extreme left. On
the Hammond, this is a two-position switch with Normal and Soft
settings; on the Korg it is a knob that ranges from 'Min' to 'Max'.
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Where the Hammond's preset keys lie, the Korg offers
three buttons for each manual. These access drawbar set 1, set 2, or
the memories. This area is also where you will find the pitch-bend and
modulation wheels. At the bottom of these panels are the Leslie controls
— On, Stop, and Fast/Slow. Every Hammond player will be comfortable
with this placement, because it's where almost everybody mounted the
crescent-shaped Leslie controls on the original Hammonds.
Finally, the panel alongside the lower manual offers
a Master Level control, Treble and Bass EQ (which you'll not find on a
vintage Hammond) and a reverb level control. And that's about it... With
minor differences, the two instruments look and feel remarkably
similar. Yes, the keyboards themselves are somewhat different, but
that's not surprising when you consider that one is a few months old,
while the other is a few decades old. But if you play either in
isolation it feels great, and I think that you would have to be a
fanatical purist to declare that the Korg was 'wrong'. Indeed, the BX3
retains the CX3's innovative keyboard mechanism that plays a note
immediately you depress a key, not when the key reaches the bottom of
its travel. This is close to the response of the real Hammond, and makes
the BX3 far more responsive than Hammond emulators with synthesizer
keyboards. (If you wish to change the response to 'synth-type', the
appropriate command is just a couple of button pushes away.)
Ups & Downs
I have only two serious criticisms of the BX3.
Firstly, it has no multi-pin output for a genuine Leslie speaker. This
is a shame because, good though the on-board effect is, there's nothing
that sounds quite like a 147 or 122RV in full flight. You can overcome
this if you can lay your hands on a Leslie that has been modified to
accept a standard quarter-inch input, and which offers independent
on/off and speed controls, but it's a shame that you should need to.
My second serious criticism is that the BX3 has no
provision for a dedicated pedalboard and, because it has just two sound
channels, you cannot add a MIDI pedalboard to play a third part. The
best you can do is use MIDI pedals to play the lower registration an
octave or so below the lower manual. Given that the Hammond XM series
and the Oberheim OB series offer three parts, I'm not inclined to
forgive Korg for this. To be fair, Keith Emerson and Jon Lord wannabes
are not going to worry about it but, unlike the CX3, the BX3 is also
aimed squarely at church players and club organists, for many of whom it
is made singularly unsuitable by this omission.
A couple of minor criticisms, also true of the CX3,
include the lack of an effects loop that would allow you to insert a
valve overdrive into the correct place in the signal path. Korg's
original, analogue CX3 and BX3 had this, so it's a shame that the modern
versions do not. Then there's the continuing absence of a spring reverb
setting, which would make the Hammond/Leslie impersonation even more
realistic.
Nonetheless, the BX3 is a joy to play. I cannot
fault the layout of the controls, and the editing system is in a
different league to some of its competitors. Likewise, the sound it
produces is 'the real thing', and I have no difficulty turning from my
A100 to the Korg BX3, and back again. I can hear the difference, but
only when the two are next to each other. Anyway, that's not the point.
They both sound superb. In particular, the key-click and 'spit' of the
BX3 is superior to any other digital organ I've played (and I've played
most), and its chorus/vibrato is almost indistinguishable from the
Hammond's. Meanwhile, in EX mode, the additional harmonics and
percussion pitches make the BX3 more flexible than any original Hammond,
let alone its digital competition.
Conclusions
Back in January 2001, I predicted that a dual-manual
version of the CX3, which would compete with (and beat the pants off)
the Hammond XB5, the Oberheim OB5 and the Roland VK77, would appear.
Korg have now delivered, and if you're going to restrict your playing to
two manuals (as I suspect most organ-loving Sound On Sound
readers will) I suggest that you use the Korg every time. However, if
you're a gospel organist, or still playing tea dances in the ballrooms
of the world, the lack of pedals and Leslie outputs may well exclude the
BX3 from your shopping list.
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