Moderators: David Martin, Iain Purdon, George Geddes, JimN, dave robinson
iefje wrote:During the drumsolo of "Little 'B'", someone shouts "yeah!" a couple of times. This can be heard very clearly on the stereo version, but is almost inaudible on the mono version. Also, at the end of "Fly Me To The Moon", someone knocks on the body of the acoustic guitar. This can be heard on the mono version, not on the stereo version.
iefje wrote:During the drumsolo of "Little 'B'", someone shouts "yeah!" a couple of times. This can be heard very clearly on the stereo version, but is almost inaudible on the mono version. Also, at the end of "Fly Me To The Moon", someone knocks on the body of the acoustic guitar. This can be heard on the mono version, not on the stereo version.
Gatwick1946 wrote:When CD's became popular in about 1985, I was amazed at the sound quality. On the 1961 recording of Nivram I can hear what I think is the drum kit (snare drum wires?) buzzing when Jet plays the bass solo. And, I admit that this could be my imagination, when I have seen The Rapiers play live, they reproduce these noises?
iefje wrote:During the drumsolo of "Little 'B'", someone shouts "yeah!" a couple of times. This can be heard very clearly on the stereo version, but is almost inaudible on the mono version. Also, at the end of "Fly Me To The Moon", someone knocks on the body of the acoustic guitar. This can be heard on the mono version, not on the stereo version.
JimN wrote:Whenever an electric guitar or bass was plugged in for demonstration purposes at (say) Hessy's in Liverpool, any loud note would make every snare drum in the shop rattle (and there might easily be ten of them around the sales area). Once heard, never forgotten.
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 93 guests