I am a musician unworthy of folding Stevie Wonder's clothes. On an unrelated note, the guys in this video should consider acting less fem and the woman should try to being a little more so.
@msalzberg49622 сағат бұрын
Sorry, but what you don't know about this recording is astounding. Oh, and it's "Moog as in vogue."
@alexjerome54293 сағат бұрын
Horrible. People who understand nothing about music that critique music. Shame the hell on em
@PRODUCEDBYKEV8 сағат бұрын
Why's somebody who's never heard of Jamerson in this convo? ijs
@pedroV200310 сағат бұрын
The Beatles = Greatest Band of All Time
@leemontree110 сағат бұрын
The intro to "House Burning Down", is to me the most direct listen of the notes in Jimi's mind to his guitar that there is.
@Claude_van10 сағат бұрын
„melodic standpoint“🤣🤣🤣🤣
@blondilass12 сағат бұрын
You guys should check out a perfect cover of EWF September by a Russian band called Leonid and Friends they are total perfection. Thank you.
@normandaubryКүн бұрын
A great interview! And it's so fun to hear about the fabulous Roger Hawkins!
@ReginaldScottRossКүн бұрын
The Horn section "Phenix Horn" are used by Phil Collins
@jckelley10Күн бұрын
Wow! I've not heard that one before! Mind blowing!
@rachidvanheyningenКүн бұрын
Don Lemon disgusting ahh ruining the whole thing
@bpabustanКүн бұрын
That's also my problem having perfect pitch, when an instrument is not tuned to 440, or a record is played a tad fast or slow,I immediately get uncomfortable.
@MAITLANDVAUGHAN-TURNER2 күн бұрын
"when you write songs..." do you pull the filter off your cigarette before you smoke it? (jklol)
@MAITLANDVAUGHAN-TURNER2 күн бұрын
... I heard of "mary ford" before... and "iris Summers" maybe Hohnen Ford is her mom? or daughter? hahahhahahah (i crack myself up) 4ths are nice if they are balanced.
@DeMolay_Ulster2 күн бұрын
Louis is out of this world, one of a kind I respect him so much
@christophertomsa70712 күн бұрын
I love listening to reviewers who understand music production, orchestration, arranging....its so refreshing to hear your analysis of this. I heard things I never noticed before. Thanks so much. Do more Beatles...
@btRU_funQsta2 күн бұрын
something to factor into understanding the tech landscape of this time- MIDI hadn't yet appeared in synths and drum machines at the time of Thriller. Anthony mentions processing Synclavier sounds thru Roland modular filters and effects, but this was audio and control voltage interfaces, not note, velocity and controllers data. That said, MIDI capabilities surfaced in products the following year, 1983, made by Sequential Circuits, Yamaha, Roland, e-Mu and others. That transition democratized electronic music production for dance, pop, R&B and funk, and made sequencing the affordable alternative to multitrack analog tape machines. I, too, have been binging Anthony's YT channel vids, as i was doing similar sessions in Northern Cal as synthesist, albeit as player and performer, and often engineer, sometimes co-producing. To wit, i bought Sequential Prophet-10 serial number 21, in 1981, which like Synclavier, was a workstation, including bi-timbral synth (2x Prophets,) onboard sequencing snd data storage. Had to return to SCI in 1983, to have MIDI upgrade kit installed, so direct digital interface with then-new DX7, as well as LinnDrum, and Roland and Oberheim synths could be managed, recording parts onto Roland MSQ-700 sequencer. Default storage for all these was, unbelievably, cassette tape! It was an exciting time for both musicians and composers, as the possibilities seemed limitless, and Thomas Dolby and many others plumbed the depths of what this new technology's implications were. Slight correction: Swedein's Accusonic process was unique, tho there were numerous studios recording and mixing with multiple 24-tracks locked up via synchronizer, to enable massive track counts, and to limit necessity for "wearing out" the physical media (tape,) by running it over and over the magnetic heads for overdubs and mixes. Also, it wan't a "needle" on that ultra-costly 10MB hard disk drive. Rather, a magnetic head (or several,) hovering just above concentric rings of magnetically-encoded material, spinning rapidly on a metal platter.
@btRU_funQsta2 күн бұрын
pic of Hammond B-3 was used for C-3. Same guts and user interface, but C-3 had flat sides, rather than legs.
@RogerBiwandu2 күн бұрын
Listening a song, liking the bass line, and not looking for knowing the name of the person behind that sound, not good, it's part of the history to know who's behind the sound you like/love, it's homework.
@neilmarchman93573 күн бұрын
Thanks guys…As a teenager Hendrix changed everything for me. Your analysis was credible and entertaining.
@Joe-nb3fs3 күн бұрын
Honestly, I learned nothing about how the two songs are related, and I personally don't hear the connection. Where are the references? Is it so obvious to the hosts that they figured it wasn't worthwhile spelling out?
@Joe-nb3fs3 күн бұрын
I guess that melodically they differ, but the pattern is the same between the two.
@jeremydmarx3 күн бұрын
This song is incredible, it made me cue up "Tonight" by Sibylle Baier.
@SealedCassettes3 күн бұрын
Love that you mentioned the indescribable 10-second air siren note in Machine Gun (live - Fillmore - 1/1/70 - Band of Gypsys). Is there a better guitar performance ever than that night's Machine Gun?!!
@cupofkona3 күн бұрын
There was a MOOG setup in a house in SANTA CRUZ....in the 60s
@swedenoutdoor3 күн бұрын
14:45 😂
@jeremywanner45263 күн бұрын
The Ox and The Beast
@barbrudolph26693 күн бұрын
The music "always feels like it's going to come off the rails but it doesn't" -- thank you for expressing one of the really special things about Hendrix, and a few other artists.
@HasseC3 күн бұрын
Like the video?? I just LOVE your videos!!!!
@pashwarinaan3 күн бұрын
hohnen ford is delightful and very talented
@chrisallen82503 күн бұрын
I completely agree with the one reviewer that Vultures is Beck's high watermark. So much energy, groove, fun and creativity. Hard to top that. I compare it to an album like Paul McCartney's "Memory Almost Full," you can always hear and feel when a musician/band is having a blast.
@koden243 күн бұрын
The most explosive opening of Guitar power!
@koden243 күн бұрын
Jimi was an Innovator!
@cpsribeiro3 күн бұрын
It's too late for anyone to read it but - talking about leading with the song not the meter that's how "Turn It On Again" by Genesis came to be. Mike Rutherford wrote the riff and literally didn't know how to measure it, it was Phil Collins that told him it was an odd time signature.
@s.scottsdale18393 күн бұрын
It's a fine song, but it sits right there in the middle. Nothing extreme about it. Nothing sociopolitical to put some off. No drug references to bug the uptight. Easy to sing cuz there's no soaring pitch high notes to hit. Also, it's no doubt a common song that will come up in any generic mix/playlist. Not likely to hear "I Want You", "WMGGW", "GTGYIMY" as much as you are this one, though I like them all more. It will likely never be a song like "Yesterday" that's been covered in studio far more.
@jsr_ffd23 күн бұрын
Thank you for this insightfull analysis of this artpiece by EWF
@BackWordsJane3 күн бұрын
Nothing gets you into the spirit of Christmas like soft jazz .That's why the Charlie Brown Christmas soundtrack is the greatest 🎵
@desmondnel57064 күн бұрын
Dammit Jack! All I wanted to do was reduce my Watch Later playlist and then I see you guys vibing... now I regret removing this. I need to find another list to put this on.
@georgefranklin50244 күн бұрын
Leonid and friends, does a great job covering this song
@allanmakela30114 күн бұрын
He had new directions to go in,and loved to just let it loose,and give a sample of where it could go,plus having a new studio,would be the perfect compliment to new explorations
@gloriamosure91844 күн бұрын
Love all of it!
@orangeslice72574 күн бұрын
Hendrix was Great, But there are too many Greats to be called #1 ... But Randy California from the group Spirit and Stevie Ray Vaughn , Hendrix was their Mentor. Listen to Colored Rain on the Love is Lp by Eric Burdon & The Animals while Andy Summers plays that Solo that just climbs ...
@LolaSky19964 күн бұрын
The asmr scared the frick out of me
@tooter1able4 күн бұрын
Tam Tam, Washington writes most of the horn parts. Based on the rhythm and melody of mama’s little baby lovesShortn shortn’n bread
@bobcole6124 күн бұрын
And let’s talk about the video. In 1985, the computer graphics took around 8 hours per second to render. Today I can do it on my iPhone. On Repeat for me? Man In The Middle-Scary Pockets ft Rozzi and MonoNeon and Magaziine-When I Was Your Man/Flowers ft Sara Neimietz and Moira Mack. Hell man, ANYTHING with Sara Neimietz. And as a bass player, Nick Campbell.
@sportsmediaamerica5 күн бұрын
Isn't "There She Goes" a Sixpence None the Richer song???
@MrBigyellowtaxi5 күн бұрын
Listen to Leonid and Friends! They cover September and they sound exact!
@donovanmarks26995 күн бұрын
That whole album just might be the greatest album ever!
@JeffSharonLive5 күн бұрын
4:43 No. Phil Collins and Peter Gabriel figured out the gated reverb by accident while recording “The Intruder” for Peter’s third album in 1980.
@mattroach53825 күн бұрын
I've been using Ableton for quite a few years now, and for me it's so much easier to use than other high quality DAWs. For me everything is easy in Ableton. In Pro Tools I had to use instructions to figure it out. They're all good products though, it's def subjective