Vox Jaguar

The Vox Jaguar is a combo organ that was built in the 1960s, one of many models of popular portable transistor organs of its time. Built in Italy by GEM (Galanti Electro Musical) under license by Jennings Musical Instruments from 1966 to 1967, and then by EME until 1971, it was a budget model visually based on the very popular Vox Continental. It had a single manual of four octaves (49 keys) and was built into the Continental's cabinet. Its technology was far less intricate, but the Jaguar still managed to produce a decent combo organ sound. It featured rocker switch tabs in place of the Continental's drawbars, and the first 12 notes were a "reversible" bass octave ("Walk" Bass/"Chord" Bass) with typical black-on-white keys. The main keyboard, like the Continental's, was white-on-black. It

Vox Jaguar

The Vox Jaguar is a combo organ that was built in the 1960s, one of many models of popular portable transistor organs of its time. Built in Italy by GEM (Galanti Electro Musical) under license by Jennings Musical Instruments from 1966 to 1967, and then by EME until 1971, it was a budget model visually based on the very popular Vox Continental. It had a single manual of four octaves (49 keys) and was built into the Continental's cabinet. Its technology was far less intricate, but the Jaguar still managed to produce a decent combo organ sound. It featured rocker switch tabs in place of the Continental's drawbars, and the first 12 notes were a "reversible" bass octave ("Walk" Bass/"Chord" Bass) with typical black-on-white keys. The main keyboard, like the Continental's, was white-on-black. It