Vintage Vibe

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Vintage Vibe is a manufacturer of keyboard instruments, based in Rockaway, New Jersey.[1] The company also offers repair services for electric pianos and amplifiers.

In 2011, they debuted their first line of electro-mechanical pianos at NAMM 2011.[2] The piano combines tine tones with modern improvements to deliver an accurate Rhodes sound in a body resembling a Wurlitzer Electric Piano.

History

The company started in 1997 as an instrument rental business, before switching to repairs due to difficulties competing in that market.[3] In 2011, they started manufacturing electric pianos, similar to those manufactured by Rhodes and Wurlitzer.[1] Reviewing their product range, Keyboard Magazine's Jon Regen praised the quality of the sounds and feel of the instrument, but questioned whether there was still a market for a product with moving parts that only produced one sound.[4]

Features

The Vintage Vibe Tine Piano was designed to be half the weight of traditional tine-based electric pianos. The action and tone are inspired by the early Fender Rhodes. The piano uses American swaged steel tines and hand-wound pickups along with a choice of active or passive electronics to achieve its tone.[5]

Variants

44 Tine Based Piano

44 Tine Piano Dimensions
HEIGHT WIDTH DEPTH WEIGHT
WITHOUT LEGS 7 7/8" 28 1/2" 21 5/8" 37 lbs
WITH LEGS 33 5/8" 28 1/2" 21 5/8" 43 lbs

Tine models use a Key Compass of F21 - C64

Bass models use a Key Compass of C4 - G46

64 Tine Based Piano

64 Tine Piano Dimensions
HEIGHT WIDTH DEPTH WEIGHT
WITHOUT LEGS 7 7/8" 37 5/8" 21 5/8" 53 lbs
WITH LEGS 33 5/8" 37 5/8" 21 5/8" 60 lbs

The 64 Tine Piano uses a Key Compass of A13 - C76

73 Tine Based Piano

73 Tine Piano Dimensions
HEIGHT WIDTH DEPTH WEIGHT
WITHOUT LEGS 7 7/8" 44 3/8" 21 5/8" 60 lbs
WITH LEGS 33 5/8" 44 3/8" 21 5/8" 66 lbs

The 73 Tine Piano uses a Key Compass of E8 - E80

Vibanet

The Vibanet was introduced at the 2013 NAMM show.[6]

Notable Users

Edie Brickell
Tom Furse of The Horrors
John Ginty (associated with The Dixie Chicks, Jewel, Santana, Bad Religion, and Robert Randolph & The Family Band)
Robert Glasper
Jem Godfrey associated with Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Atomic Kitten
Peter Keys of Lynyrd Skynyrd
Marcel Rodríguez-López of The Mars Volta, and Zechs Marquise
Chris Norton of Zappa Plays Zappa
Knut Anders Sørum
Justin Vernon of Bon Iver & The Shouting Matches
Stevie Wonder

References

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External Links

Official Site

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