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Talk about soul.
I put on a Bill Haley and the Comets record the other day and it sounded GREAT!
On C.D.

How did those guys record?
One mic?…Four mics?….
Obviously complete tube signal path.Maybe 1” tape …. One track?
Anyone know?

It sounded so fresh and balanced.Glenn Miller’s goode too.
Talk about soul.

Comments

anonymous Fri, 07/18/2003 - 05:33

Talking about Soul...

Love's "Forever Changes" off vinyl on a sunny day especially:

A House Is Not A Motel..."...I hear 'ya calling my naaame...!"

Daily Planet...where it breaks down to just the acoustic, then bass comes in and that sound of a waa switching in and...

You Set The Scene...last track...it's just that bassline...

:D

Talk about soul...

Recordings you made years ago on ramshackle equipment when you were much younger and less experienced...but there's just something about them...like...magical...

(yea yea, so I've been looking through my "archives" recently ;) )

Mark

--------------------------
"Oscillators don't, amplifiers do....."
Anon.

anonymous Fri, 07/18/2003 - 23:46

Anybody thrown on The Band "The Band" lately? All recorded in one room, live off the floor, vocals and everything, the tape machine and mixing board sitting next to them. If they felt the track was getting tired they would freshen up by trading around instruments (the keyboard player would get on the drums, the drummer would play bass, somebody new would sing). They even had the engineer do a horn solo that went on the album, even though he had never played a horn before!
You can hear all the magic- I get goosebumps every time I hear "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down". If you don't own it, buy it today. Doc

Sebatron Sat, 07/19/2003 - 00:10

Hey yeah , The Band.
All in one room ?...one Mic?
...gotta check it out.That's more like it.

I like that 'Crosby Stills and Nash ' record,
the first one.Little Richard gets played a fair bit as well.

...actually i picked up 'hits of '79' the other day.....a compilation C.D.

This was on it:
Cheap Trick
The Knack
Lena Lovich
Blondie
Born to be alive

i can't remember the rest.

Some good tom sounds.

Pez Sun, 07/20/2003 - 22:02

The Comets were really great. Some fine guitar playing for such an early era. Rock around the clock has a great solo with lots of energy. I'm heavy into rockabilly. They helped to define rock and roll without a doubt. Just heard Brian Setzer trio at the NAMM show. They rocked the house down. Incredible playing. Doc, the Band is still one of my favs of all time.

Pez Tue, 07/22/2003 - 09:51

I don't know if I was a relation (Ben Grimm) but I certainly felt like one when I was a kid. Actually I had a thing for Tina (Metal Men). She was a robot in love with her creator. She would cry when she wasn't supposed to (no feelings built in I guess). She was a fox (if she only knew how I felt about her) :eek:

anonymous Tue, 07/22/2003 - 19:54

Originally posted by Rod Gervais:
Always loved Crosby Still and Nash - but damn - back in the "good old days" Loggins and Messina did some great stuff too...... and Doc..... you're right about the "Band"........

I'm a little worried, Rod. Loggins and Messina in the same sentence as CS&N and The Band??? Isn't that kind of like comparing Bob Seger to Bob Dylan?

Maybe I just never heard the right songs. when you say L&M all that pops into my head is "Your Mama don't dance..." Wouldn't that be in the bubblegum category? oh, well... maybe i'm even older than you!

Pez Tue, 07/22/2003 - 20:58

I'm going to defend Rod here. I agree that Loggin's later stuff turns me off and I can easily understand how "Mama don't Dance" could encourage one to commit early suicide. The first Loggins & Messina LP was quite good however for it's time. It's been years since I've heard it but I remember Jim Messina playing some cool guitar licks way before a lot of that style became popular. Wasn't he originally with Buffalo Springfield?

anonymous Wed, 07/23/2003 - 00:10

Originally posted by Sebatron:
Talk about soul.
I put on a Bill Haley and the Comets record the other day and it sounded GREAT!
On C.D.

How did those guys record?
One mic?…Four mics?….
Obviously complete tube signal path.Maybe 1” tape …. One track?
Anyone know?

It sounded so fresh and balanced.Glenn Miller’s goode too.
Talk about soul.

It was probably an Ampex 350 1/4" full-track. The electronics were likely modified broadcast gear, such as RCA or Western Electric.

Luke

Sebatron Wed, 07/23/2003 - 05:21

You're right Luke.

I pinched this quote about the Ampex 350.

Ampex 350 tape recorder electronics: Technically speaking, these are the electronics that go with the legendary Ampex 350 series reel-to-reel recorders. But, once converted into a mic preamp, they yield a lush, round sound that sounds great when overdriven just a bit. It's all tube. Tons of hits in the 1950s and early 1960s were recorded on the 350 series reel-to-reels. Take a listen to something tracked through a mic preamp conversion using Ampex 350 electronics and you'll know why. Absolutely one of the coolest vintage tube mic preamps on the planet for recording bass, kick drum, and even vocals.

:c:

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