Carey Carlan
08-20-2003, 06:47 PM
I'm transported back to the late 70's (or is it the early 80's) with
unabashed synths and drum machine.
Neil's goal here was a full soundstage, a 'rich' mix. He succeded. Not
bad for a one man band. When the compressions starts winning (e.g. about
:30 to :45) the individual channels start bouncing up and down to make room
for the loudest.
I could envision this competing with the likes of Boston and Styx for radio
play 'back in the day'. It has a real 'electronic' sound to it, even the
(few) analog tracks.
This is a true one man production. Wrote the song. Played all the tracks.
Recorded and mixed.
unabashed synths and drum machine.
Neil's goal here was a full soundstage, a 'rich' mix. He succeded. Not
bad for a one man band. When the compressions starts winning (e.g. about
:30 to :45) the individual channels start bouncing up and down to make room
for the loudest.
I could envision this competing with the likes of Boston and Styx for radio
play 'back in the day'. It has a real 'electronic' sound to it, even the
(few) analog tracks.
This is a true one man production. Wrote the song. Played all the tracks.
Recorded and mixed.