I'm digging it.....Musicians. third graders, it's all the same thing.
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
Show posts MenuQuote from: Muadzin on March 04, 2019, 12:44:23 PMBwahahahaha exactly.Quote from: Matmosphere on March 02, 2019, 07:08:29 PM
I don't get the stones at all.
The Beatles Grew up in bad neighborhoods, started playing when they were young (15) and kept at it and worked their butts off. They didn't have any chance to come up out of poverty from my understanding. They were scrappers and got in fights a lot because they grew up in rough areas.
The Stones met at art school. And yet they have the tough guy image not the Beatles.
Maybe because of their art background the Stones understood that image was important to rock music and that looking the rebellious part would help them. And help them in no small part to differentiate them from the Beatles, who were their rivals at the time.Quote from: alanp on March 02, 2019, 07:58:00 PM
What I really don't get is all the hero-worship Elvis got. As far as I know, he was a fat guy who died on the toilet, and sang songs like "Wooden Heart", and "In The Ghetto".
Personally I'm amazed his hero worship survived the 60's, with all the crappy movies. Or the 70's, when he got fat and mostly played Vegas. I reckon its a testimony to the massive impact he made in the 50's and how his fanbase stayed with him. Occasionally rejuvenated by something worthwhile again, like the Comeback Special. Which was excellent. There's probably a few other factors working here. Like with the Beatles he was one of the firsts. The first always sets the benchmark for the followup to live up to. There's probably better singers then Elvis, better composers then the Beatles, tougher rockbands then the Rolling Stones, better guitarists then Jimi Hendrix. But they got there first, made their mark and the rest has to live in their shadow.
And there's also a psychological thing going on. Ever notice when there's a mob standing there? Looking at something? What do you do? Well, join them of course to see what's going on. We humans have this herd mentality where we want to be part of the herd. Sneakers are in fashion? Everybody starts wearing them. A new club has become trendy? We wait long hours in line just to visit it. Autotune on vocals in fashion? You get nauseous from the constantly shifting vocals in EVERY DAMN SONG. We've decided long ago that Elvis and the Beatles are great. Therefore we now too consider them great. They have to be great. After all, that is what everyone keeps saying so it must be true.Quote from: jimilee on March 03, 2019, 02:25:41 AM
I don't really listen to them that often, but I have mad respect for everyone except Ringo. He was in the right place at the right time, and he acts like it was all him to this day. Hate that guy.
So........ he's the Lars Ulrich of the Beatles?
Quote from: peAk on March 03, 2019, 02:43:47 AMLies!!!!Quote from: jimilee on March 03, 2019, 02:25:41 AMQuote from: madbean on March 03, 2019, 01:34:30 AMI really like the mixing style they used where you have a guitar in the right speaker, one in the left and drums and bass in the middle. It is really clean and sounds great in the car. Sometimes I get so enthralled in the mix that I won't even listen to the song.
You guys be derailing my thrad!
That's cool though - I like reading people's take on things. I go through phases with the Beatles and right now I'm in the "god-like" camp. Specifically after I listened to both of these recordings through headphones the other day.
Here's what struck me:
1) Heavy, deep bass - esp in Hey Jude. It's not a clean recording but to me it's just got so much bottom esp. considering we are not talking about distorted guitars, etc. I love it.
2) The way the mid-range/upper mids contrast with that bottom. Esp. how the vocals sit in the mix relative to the bass and drums. To me, it's like a sheet of paper going in an envelope. A perfect fit.
3) The lack of over-compression we so often have to tolerate in modern recordings. Which isn't to say there isn't any happening (I can hear a bit on the drums here and there but that also could be due to the delivery format).
Anyway, I say over and over I'm no golden-eared pony boy but both of these just really caught me off-guard me when I listened to them the other day.
I don't really listen to them that often, but I have mad respect for everyone except Ringo. He was in the right place at the right time, and he acts like it was all him to this day. Hate that guy.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
oh man, I love Ringo's drumming and drum sound!
Quote from: madbean on March 03, 2019, 01:34:30 AMI really like the mixing style they used where you have a guitar in the right speaker, one in the left and drums and bass in the middle. It is really clean and sounds great in the car. Sometimes I get so enthralled in the mix that I won't even listen to the song.
You guys be derailing my thrad!
That's cool though - I like reading people's take on things. I go through phases with the Beatles and right now I'm in the "god-like" camp. Specifically after I listened to both of these recordings through headphones the other day.
Here's what struck me:
1) Heavy, deep bass - esp in Hey Jude. It's not a clean recording but to me it's just got so much bottom esp. considering we are not talking about distorted guitars, etc. I love it.
2) The way the mid-range/upper mids contrast with that bottom. Esp. how the vocals sit in the mix relative to the bass and drums. To me, it's like a sheet of paper going in an envelope. A perfect fit.
3) The lack of over-compression we so often have to tolerate in modern recordings. Which isn't to say there isn't any happening (I can hear a bit on the drums here and there but that also could be due to the delivery format).
Anyway, I say over and over I'm no golden-eared pony boy but both of these just really caught me off-guard me when I listened to them the other day.
Quote from: alanp on March 02, 2019, 07:58:00 PMBlue collar men during that time didn't pay much attention to their wives, they just worked and drank beer.
What I really don't get is all the hero-worship Elvis got. As far as I know, he was a fat guy who died on the toilet, and sang songs like "Wooden Heart", and "In The Ghetto".
Quote from: madbean on February 16, 2019, 02:08:11 AMWell I guess key mapping is right out then.Quote from: Govmnt_Lacky on February 16, 2019, 01:40:18 AMQuote from: madbean on February 16, 2019, 01:30:05 AM
No matter how many years I;ve been typing, I hit the damn semi-colon instead of a single quote mark every time! This is serious business.
Maybe it is because you are looking for the wrong thing. You should be looking for an apostrophe.![]()
Look, if you;re going to get technical this is going to be a long discussion.