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Joined: Mon March 30, 2020 11:59 pm Posts: 1757 Location: sleep sac in a bivouac
This song hits kind of like Habit for me, in that it’s a short repetitive banger that’s nice enough but in reality every time my nerves are on alert prepping for that scintillating solo.
_________________ Be mighty...Be humble...Be mighty humble...
likes rhythmic things that butt up against each other
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 8:02 pm Posts: 970
Strat wrote:
oneway23 wrote:
96583UP wrote:
somehow this bothers me little about modern ed
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I've always been skeptical when someone says that a particular gig destroyed a singers voice. I remember reading about the same thing years ago, how some people were pointing to a specific gig that ruined Robert Plant's voice (it was a rainy, cold night etc.). And the same has been said about Dylan too.
But is it really so that a single performance can damage someone's voice so bad that the damage is permanent? Like I said I'm skeptical, but at the same time I know nothing about vocal chords or any of that stuff, so maybe I'm wrong.
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I know nothing about vocal chords or any of that stuff
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I know nothing about vocal chords or any of that stuff
Motion to ban.
Wait, not so fast. What does he know about drum sounds?
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I know nothing about vocal chords or any of that stuff
Motion to ban.
Wait, not so fast. What does he know about drum sounds?
I'm thinking of writing up a music production 101 exam that I'll be handing out to all of you on release day. I will, of course, be passing it across Trag's desk for feedback.
_________________ We still make records to be listened to — not that everyone will listen to a record track one to twelve in a row or side A or Side B — but we still make 'em in case somebody does want to listen to it like that, that's how we make em…
likes rhythmic things that butt up against each other
Joined: Thu December 07, 2023 9:27 am Posts: 913
contamination wrote:
Strat wrote:
oneway23 wrote:
96583UP wrote:
somehow this bothers me little about modern ed
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I've always been skeptical when someone says that a particular gig destroyed a singers voice. I remember reading about the same thing years ago, how some people were pointing to a specific gig that ruined Robert Plant's voice (it was a rainy, cold night etc.). And the same has been said about Dylan too.
But is it really so that a single performance can damage someone's voice so bad that the damage is permanent? Like I said I'm skeptical, but at the same time I know nothing about vocal cords or any of that stuff, so maybe I'm wrong.
They get sore and they get better. The only way to permanently damage your chords by singing is when you’re a 14 yo boy.
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I've always been skeptical when someone says that a particular gig destroyed a singers voice. I remember reading about the same thing years ago, how some people were pointing to a specific gig that ruined Robert Plant's voice (it was a rainy, cold night etc.). And the same has been said about Dylan too.
But is it really so that a single performance can damage someone's voice so bad that the damage is permanent? Like I said I'm skeptical, but at the same time I know nothing about vocal cords or any of that stuff, so maybe I'm wrong.
They get sore and they get better. The only way to permanently damage your chords by singing is when you’re a 14 yo boy.
{All of us in our rooms trying to sing Blood in the 90s}
it's the whole approach now, too many words/micro machines delivery, breathiness, strange pronunciations, all the tics and crutches, and his tendency toward random soap-star glam bridges
i guess it was the avocado era where he ruined his voice for good
so now this is what he has left to work with
The VH1 rock honors for the who is my personal demarcation point....that performance is staggering, but, there was a price
Almost worth it !
Love those performances so much but I agree. He will write about that in his book someday
I've always been skeptical when someone says that a particular gig destroyed a singers voice. I remember reading about the same thing years ago, how some people were pointing to a specific gig that ruined Robert Plant's voice (it was a rainy, cold night etc.). And the same has been said about Dylan too.
But is it really so that a single performance can damage someone's voice so bad that the damage is permanent? Like I said I'm skeptical, but at the same time I know nothing about vocal chords or any of that stuff, so maybe I'm wrong.
Hard to believe there's only a year or so between that VH1 performance and the debut of Got Some on Late Night, which was the first time I heard his voice significantly worsen.
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