04 November 2010

What was THAT???

Some weeks ago, we moved our recording mic to the other side of our rehearsal space—opposite side of my amp. And though the bass fills the room quite well "live," the recorded versions of late have thrown my guitar very low in the playback mix. As I use these recordings to "rehearse"—reviewing my part and how plays with the rhythm section—during the week, I've had to resort to maxing out my car radio with the bass setting at 6 (yeah, no 11 on this amp) and even this hardly works.

So, I was driving home last night reviewing the night's work. We had another recording snafu that put the output levels of the first half of the session at a very low overall volume. The warm-up songs of our versions of WILD NIGHTS and GET RHYTHM along with the two originals, FREE TABLE and 10 LITTLE INDISCREETS needed to be cranked to even be heard. This problem seemed to be fixed when we got to the first run throughs of our "new" songs DON'T THINK TWICE and Sonia's original DRINK THAT WHISKEY QUICKLY.

Still, the bass was in that "buried" spot on the playback.

But suddenly, my iPod moved to the next track and BLASTING out my CRV's speakers was the heaviest of low E to G - A riffs imaginable! The BOOM nearly shook my little car off the interstate!

What was THAT!?!

Turns out a "somewhat old" recording was downloaded in the mix of recent rehearsal takes. The Mittys were working their heavy-blues-groove stuff on a rearrangement of the classic Berry Gordy tune, MONEY. It was wild! One take had Jim playing tremolo drenched guitar til the second solo when he switched to keys (the first solo in the rough arrangement was a sax solo "played" by drummer Paul in a "wah, wah, wah" scat on the mic). I mean, these two takes were out-of-the-vault as one had former Mitty, Laura Jacques singing back-up (she quit the band over two years ago).

So, that was THAT.


~slatts

2 comments:

  1. Wow, I remember that... but only barely!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah, Jim, it sounded like it was recorded on your old recording device that use to "record itself working" with the repeated "ffffft!" showing up.

    The versions weren't half bad. Another song lost in the archives.

    ReplyDelete