
Freudian Slip
New member
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You are just having issues Ido

F.S.
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Glad to know our music makes you feel that way, hahyou have to admit (maybe us older guys), that the dynamics and fidelity of metal and music in general is getting worse. Its the whole "Loudness Wars"![]()
Glad to know our music makes you feel that way, hah
Fair enough! I was just poking fun at 'ya a bitI think the material is great and its sits right in line with other metal stuff thats out right now. I'd love to hear your stuff with the dynamics of say "Procol Harums, Conquistador", or say "Rush 2112". Yes, Im old. But I also realize younger groups like the whole square wave thing. Ive recorded a few local metal bands and they all want it loud. I tell them to turn up the stereos, but they want it squashed, so I do it. It all pays.
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Fair enough! I was just poking fun at 'ya a bitThe more dynamic songs are towards the end of the CD (the first half is pretty much full-on the entire time). If you didn't get to it, check out "Cover of Smoke"!
Excellent points in your post FS. I think the mix reflects "today's" standard quite well. Even though I don't like today's stuff as much as say rock from the 70's, it puts steve in good stead with the mainstream stuff. You can hear a lot of hard work has gone into this project by the quality of the results....But, you have to admit (maybe us older guys), that the dynamics and fidelity of metal and music in general is getting worse. Its the whole "Loudness Wars"![]()
I've been thinking about this modern metal vs. 70's metal stuff in terms of mixing. It occurred to me while listening to Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" yesterday, that if I had tracked and mixed our record the way Paranoid was tracked/mixed, I really don't think the message we were trying to convey would have translated nearly as well, and vice versa. If Paranoid was re-recorded with today's "standard" methods, I feel like it would lose all of the feel and purpose of the original record.Excellent points in your post FS. I think the mix reflects "today's" standard quite well. Even though I don't like today's stuff as much as say rock from the 70's, it puts steve in good stead with the mainstream stuff. You can hear a lot of hard work has gone into this project by the quality of the results....
Thanks a lot for the feedback guysI definitely feel I've got some ways to go to get to where I want to be, especially when it comes to drums, but I like the majority of how it turned out! I really appreciate that y'all took the time to download and listen to my project
I've been thinking about this modern metal vs. 70's metal stuff in terms of mixing. It occurred to me while listening to Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" yesterday, that if I had tracked and mixed our record the way Paranoid was tracked/mixed, I really don't think the message we were trying to convey would have translated nearly as well, and vice versa. If Paranoid was re-recorded with today's "standard" methods, I feel like it would lose all of the feel and purpose of the original record.
What'd be interesting to discuss is whether or not the increasingly "over-the-top" standards of metal mixes has actually hurt metal (as some think), or instead has created new forms of expression (as I think), and that most people simply aren't using it to its full potential yet?
Thanks a lot for the feedback guysI definitely feel I've got some ways to go to get to where I want to be, especially when it comes to drums, but I like the majority of how it turned out! I really appreciate that y'all took the time to download and listen to my project
I've been thinking about this modern metal vs. 70's metal stuff in terms of mixing. It occurred to me while listening to Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" yesterday, that if I had tracked and mixed our record the way Paranoid was tracked/mixed, I really don't think the message we were trying to convey would have translated nearly as well, and vice versa. If Paranoid was re-recorded with today's "standard" methods, I feel like it would lose all of the feel and purpose of the original record.
What'd be interesting to discuss is whether or not the increasingly "over-the-top" standards of metal mixes has actually hurt metal (as some think), or instead has created new forms of expression (as I think), and that most people simply aren't using it to its full potential yet?