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  1. Mar 28, 2012 · In 1935, the Hammond company could not conceive that their instrument would ever be used in jazz or blues, let alone rock. By the same token, in 1935, organs had never been used in jazz or blues. Soon the Hammond organ was being used for newly emerging forms of music. Its sustained sound added a new dimension to jazz and blues.

  2. Jan 9, 2024 · It led to it becoming an important instrument in the development of gospel music. Jazz musicians were quick to hear the potential of the Hammond organ; Count Basie played the Hammond A as early as 1939 with his Basie’s Bad Boys, and Fats Waller used the newly introduced Hammond B-3 on his 1950s albums for Riverside Records.

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    • Booker T. Jones
    • Cory Henry
    • Jimmy Smith
    • Gregg Rolie

    It’s hard to think of anybody capable of displaying the beauty of the B3 better than the legendary Booker T. Jones. Aged only 17, he penned ‘Green Onions’: a three-minute, three-chord instrumental jam in F minor that, at the time, was set to be released as a B-side. The tune quickly burst into the Billboard Top 100, and is considered one of the mos...

    Cory Henry is undoubtedly one of the finest keyboard players alive today. After tearing it upon the KingKORG with his former experimental jazz outfit Snarky Puppy, he’s now usually playing his heart out on the Hammond B3. A child prodigy, Henry was playing both the piano and organ by the age of two, making his debut at the Apollo Theatre when he wa...

    If you were to ask any accomplished jazz organist about their main influences, you’d almost certainly hear the name Jimmy Smith in every answer. Originally a pianist, James Oscar Smith was inspired to take up the organ after hearing swing pioneer Wild Bill Davis’ invigorating Hammond work, with the Missourian’s rotor-drenched gospel tones blasting ...

    While perhaps not sporting the technical chops of a Smith or Henry, Gregg Rolie is, notwithstanding, one of the most important proponents of the Hammond B3. While fellow psychedelic rock organist Ray Manzarek opted for the Vox Continental, Rolie chose to embolden Santana’s loose, Latin rock with the brilliance of the B3. Rolie’s (albeit short-lived...

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  4. The Hammond organ is an electric organ invented by Laurens Hammond and John M. Hanert [6] and first manufactured in 1935. [7] Multiple models have been produced, most of which use sliding drawbars to vary sounds. Until 1975, Hammond organs generated sound by creating an electric current from rotating a metal tonewheel near an electromagnetic ...

    • 1935–1975 (tonewheel models), 1967–1985 (transistor models), 1986–present (digital models)
    • $1,193 (Model A, 1935), $2,745 (Model B-3, 1955)
  5. Inventor Laurens Hammond turned his hand to many odd things before he had a go at making a low-cost pipe-less church organ, and his ingenious solution to replicating the harmonic frequencies of ...

  6. Laurens Hammond began producing organs in 1935 in Chicago, Illinois, making use of the same sound generation method. However, he used much smaller tone generators and fewer registers. The patent for his model A organ dates from 1934.

  7. Hammond organs have such an iconic and important place in rock, blues, and soul music. In this three part series of interviews with Cliff Unruh, we are going to talk about inventor Laurens Hammond and how the Hammond Organ Company came about, how the Hammond works from a simplified technical standpoint, and how the mechanical design shapes the sound characteristics that make the Hammond so iconic.