Better Writing From Recording
1How many of you have learned from or have been inspired from the bands that you have recorded? I heard a vocalist the other day that really opened my mind up to pronunciation and cadence.
Moderator: Greg
johnnyshape wrote:There's a duo I regularly record who both work in the wine industry. I now know almost more about wine than I care to, plus I look forward hugely to the end of their sessions.
Cranius wrote:johnnyshape wrote:There's a duo I regularly record who both work in the wine industry. I now know almost more about wine than I care to, plus I look forward hugely to the end of their sessions.
In Vino Veritas.
johnnyshape wrote:There's a duo I regularly record who both work in the wine industry.
Rick Reuben wrote:He went to bed about a decade ago, or whenever he sold his soul to the bankers and the elites.daniel robert chapman wrote:I think he's gone to bed, Rick.
isophase wrote:I once did a session (as a musician) with this guy here in france, it was the 4th and last day i had rented and so we were mixing the tracks. By the end of the day we started drinking exellent red wine and I eventualy smoked some hashish. we ended up listening to some recordings of his. he said:"what you are going to hear now, is a human voice recorded 24 times on 24 tracks" (adat).
he opened each channel at a time quite fast one by one, and by the time he reached the channel n° 24, something very strange happened.
I realized at this very moment that i was drunk.
the music was loud, and sounded like one lonnng identical note sang 24times with lots of intermodulation. at one point he shouted:" can you feel the waves?!" it was definitly a tsunami. i was feeling sick, and when i stood up to go to the toilets, i felt terrible. i crawled all the way there and and vomited. Remember being on the floor near the toilet with this gigantesque wall of sound in the background.
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