User manual
1. THE SOUNDS OF MOJO 61
VB3-II virtual tonewheel organ
This is the exact same software that powers the Crumar Mojo and
presents the same parameter set. VB3-II is the result of 12 years of
study, research, experimentation and development of the simulation
of a vintage Hammond B3 organ. It is the evolution of the GSi VB3 1.4
which is still available as a plugin for digital audio workstations. In the
last  5 or  6   years it   has  been considered  the  best  simulation  of  a
tonewheel   organ   by   some   of   the   most   acclaimed   jazz   and   rock
organists and organ techs. The Crumar Mojo has been a best-seller in the "Clone
Organ"  market  during  2013  and   2014 and now the   new  Mojo   61 offers you the
possibility   to   take   advantage   of   one   of   the   best   clone   organs   ever   without
compromises.
Pipe Organ
A   pipe   organ   is   not   something   you   see   every   day,   there   are
thousands   of   different   pipe   organs   that   differ   by   the   number   of
stops, the number of manuals, the number and the type of pipes,
their size, their position, etc. but we wanted to keep it simple and
offer a pipe organ that would be easy to understand and inspiring to
play, so we chose to offer a Baroque-style organ based on a single
manual and 9 stops plus 3 couplers and the classic "tremulant" effect.
This   synth   engine   works   as   an   hybrid   synthesizer,   uses   additive   synthesis   and
physical modeling, there are no samples involved. The expression pedal responds
naturally and varies the amount of air that passes through the pipes. There is a total
of 776 virtual pipes.
Combo Organs
The   Mojo   61   features   two   simulations   of   very   famous   Italian
transistor   organs   of   the   seventies,   the  VOX   Continental   and   the
Farfisa Compact DeLuxe. Each of these organs is simulated in every
detail, reproducing  the   essence  and   the exact color of that gritty
organ sound that was the cornerstone of rock bands like the Doors,
the Pink Floyd and similar. The polyphony is full (all 61 notes at the
same   time)   and   all   controls   behave   exactly   like   in   the   original
instrument. One note: since both these organs were originally based on 49-note
keyboards,   we   chose   to   bring   the   pedalboard   tones   to   the   first   octave.   The
pedalboard tone has no settings.
CRUMAR MOJO 61 USER'S MANUAL - Page 4/33










