king_arthur wrote:I
King Arthur (me)
Well, I made another King Arthur song... sorry, this is
what I do...
That's a good thing. Don't apologize.
king_arthur wrote:I
King Arthur (me)
Well, I made another King Arthur song... sorry, this is
what I do...
And it is also awesome to receive reviews! Thank you, sir!jeremydeanband wrote:i have to add thats friggen awsome to hear so many different views of one title every week.
Ya know, I posted an earlier comment with a louder mix of this song attached.Lml
Way to quiet, you cant really hear the track. But what I could hear, I liked. It sounds like it is a good song, I just cant really enjoy it because I cant really hear it.
You do realize I'm Texan, right? That's my accent. lolLML - I was able to crank this enough to appreciate it. As a solo-performer act, it might need something richer on the guitar, but as a song it carries a fine tension and interest. The singing also is very good, with a gritty urgency. If I have a quibble, it would be as an accent snob: the pronunciation of "can't" made me think of Jean Hagen's delivery as Lina Lamont in Singin' in the Rain. My bad for watching too many old movies.
I use Chrome and have never had any problems like that. Are you double-clicking the "submit" button or something?LML wrote:Fuck, that's Google chrome for you. How do you delete this shit again?
that would be "Love You To." but you got the right album.fluffy wrote: It ruins things for me that I recognize Tomorrow Never Knows immediately,
Oh, heh, it's been a while since I've listened to the Beatles obsessively.Ross wrote:that would be "Love You To." but you got the right album.fluffy wrote: It ruins things for me that I recognize Tomorrow Never Knows immediately,
It's a real sitar -- lots of details in the prefight thread.fluffy wrote:Okay finally I am getting around to reviewing here, because I don't feel like actually working right now.
Longfellow Street: A nice haunting sound, actually using what sounds like a real sitar (I don't know if it is or not but it doesn't really matter as long as it sounds right). I like these more sedate, introspective songs, and this wouldn't be too out of place in an Indian restaurant. vote
You're bang on about the engineering. And the song is too short -- partly because I couldn't fake the raga version of the bridge that I had in mind, and partly because my wife ran out of patience. Glad you liked the concept -- thanks for the review!James Owens: Scotland meets India? Interesting musical idea. The mix/EQ are way off (the vocals are way high and bassy/muddy), but I can look past that. The song's a bit short and doesn't feel very satisfying to me though. It seems like a good start to something better.
great description of the session. I only overdubbed because we couldn't get all the right inputs going and my channel was super noisy. But I also think the energy of the room is still present.fluffy wrote:the dulcimer (Ross had practiced it with us but opted to overdub it later)