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Encyclopedia > Fender Rhodes

A Rhodes piano is a musical instrument. Its distinctive sound has appeared particularly in jazz and rock songs of the last fifty years.


The Rhodes piano was invented in the 1940s by Harold Rhodes, and its principles are derived from both the celesta and the electric guitar. The action is similar to that of a conventional piano, but whereas in a conventional piano each key causes a felt-covered hammers to strike a set of strings, in a Rhodes piano they strike a tuning fork-like construction to sound the note.


The tuning forks themselves are "unbalanced" or asymmetrical: one arm consists of a short, stiff metal rod (essentially a stiff wire) called a "tine" which is struck by the hammer, and the other arm is a tuned resonator resembling a piece of metal bar stock, sized to sound the appropriate note. The actual sounded note is too soft to be practical, so each tine vibrates in front of an electric-guitar-style magnetic pickup. The pickups' output is fed to an amplifier which can be adjusted to produce the desired volume.


The sound produced has a bell-like character not unlike a celesta or glockenspiel. Because the instrument produces sound electrically, the signal can be processed to yield many different timbral colors. Often the signal is processed through a "delay" or "chorus" effects unit, which adds a distinctive vibrato similar to a vibraphone; it is this "rounded" or chiming sound that is most typically called a classic Rhodes sound. When notes are played forcefully, the sound becomes less sweet, as nonlinear distortion creates a characteristic "growling" or "snarling" overload -- skilled players can contrast the sweet and rough sounds to create an extremely expressive perfomance.


The Rhodes was particularly popular during the 1960s and 1970s, and many of its signature songs date from this period: The Doors "Riders On The Storm", "Just the Way You Are" by Billy Joel, "Still Crazy After All These Years" by Paul Simon, "Dark Star" by The Grateful Dead , or the theme from "Taxi" by Bob James.


The Fender Guitar Company bought the Rhodes company in the 1950s, and produced the instruments for many years, in conjunction with Fender-designed amplifiers. The instrument is thus often termed a "Fender Rhodes" though purists often prefer simply "Rhodes." The actual instruments are more rare in latter days: they are fragile, heavy, and tedious to tune. Consumer-grade electronic keyboards usually include built-in "electric piano" patches that approximate the signature Rhodes sound with considerably more convenience.


Compare with:

External link:


Rhodes Super Site (http://www.fenderrhodes.com)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Fender - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (948 words)
Fender is particularly important because of its role in bringing solidbody electric guitars to the masses.
Fender offered the first mass-produced solid-body Spanish-style electric guitar, the Telecaster (originally named the 'Broadcaster', 'Esquire' is a single pickup version); the first mass-produced electric bass guitar, the Precision Bass (or P-Bass); and the enormously popular Stratocaster guitar (or 'Strat' for short).
Fender manufactures its highest quality models in the United States and Japan, but also has extensive manufacturing facilities in China and Mexico for downmarket models, such that a new guitar with the name, 'Fender Stratocaster,' can be purchased for roughly the same dollar amount today as in 1954.
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