THE HAMMOND ORGAN - HISTORY LESSON


The Hammond Organ came to life in the1930's. Laurens Hammond developed his instrument based on the design of the Cahill Telharmonian. The first production unit, the Model A, was introduced in 1935, and serial #1 now resides in the Smithsonian Museum. The B3 and C3 organs played by most present day organists were introduced in 1955. There were approximately sixty to seventy thousand of these particular models produced by the time they were discontinued in1974 when the factory in Chicago burned down.

The Hammond Organ creates its tones from a group of 91 tonewheels, collectively called a tone generator. Inside it are a wondrous mix of gears, springs, drive shafts, galleries and oil wicks. A motor causes the tonewheels to spin at a rate locked to the electrical supply frequency of 50 to 60 Hz; it is this system which makes tuning a Hammond unnecessary, although it can be made frighteningly out of tune with other instruments when connected to a misaligned AC generator system often used at outdoor concerts. The output of the tone generator is 91 sine waves.
Combining these tones through drawbars located on the top of the organ allows the player to mix and create many different sounds.

Nothing like this existed in the 30's, and the uniqueness of its tone soon took the country by storm. Mr. Hammond was marketing savy enough to have his instrument endorsed by many famous people of the time, including Henry Ford and Thomas Edison.

The goal of the Hammond Organ Company was to sell to churches and concert halls as a portable and less expensive way for a church to have an instrument that sounded like a pipe organ without the pipes. Given the cost of the pipe organ competition many Hammonds were sold. A number of them found their way to black gospel churches, and it is from this environment many of the early jazz and blues players developed their styles.

When designed, it came with a PR40 tone cabinet consisting of front facing speakers in a cabinet that simulated the sound of the pipes. Don Leslie designed a cabinet with a rotating speaker that he wanted to have Hammond include in its manufacturing process. Hammond did not feel it had the pure sound he wanted for his organ. Leslie manufactured his own cabinets and people bought them separate. It consisted of an upper rotor for the high frequency driver and a rotating cage on the bottom with a scoop which projects the sound from the down-facing low speaker. This created a sound that locked in perfectly with the sound of the organ and in fact became know as the "Hammond Sound".

Hammond later started calling the B models the "Home Model" because you could see the organist's legs work the pedals. C and RT models had full modesty panels across the back supposedly so female church organists would not worry the congregation was looking up their dress while playing.

People played the Hammonds from the time of manufacture throughout the 1940's but Jimmy Smith was the man that popularized the instrument in the 1950's with his trio consisting of organ, guitar and drums. Others were playing the instrument but Jimmy defined the style. In the 1960's he did some albums with Lalo Schiffrin and Oliver Nelson which took the organ to an original voice with a big band and others such as Gerald Wilson had Richard "Groove" Holmes on organ on many of his albums with his big band. Booker T and the MGs put it to work on much of the Stax recordings of the 1960's and had many albums on their own hits including "Green Onions" and "Time Is Tight".

It then went into the rock arena with the Young Rascals, Procol Harem, Chicago, The Allman Brothers, Santana and became an integral part of the music scene with many different tones and colors to choose from.

With the synthesizer revolution of the 1970's and 1980's then samplers that were basically recordings of the Hammond organ sound and because of the weight of the 600-pound instrument and difficulty of carrying it around it became less and less plausible to include the instrument on stage performances. Hammond abandoned tonewheel organ production in the late 70's and, sadly, stopped making the instrument in 1984. Several keyboards have come out since then which have tried to simulate the instrument. They began developing other markets with the inclusion of rhythm units, auto-chord, and self-accompanying organs. However, none have captured the tone and feel of the original instruments..

In the 90's, a few bands appeared that incorporated the sound of the instrument and some even used the vintage organ itself such as Modeski, Martin & Wood, Galactic, Santana (who always did use the organ in his bands), Joey DeFrancesco, Soulive and others in the jazz and blues idiom which created interest once again in the instrument.


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