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Rain

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Posts posted by Rain

  1. 2 minutes ago, OutrageProductions said:

    And that, in a nutshell, is why the producers chair exists... to get the artist out of their shell, and out of their own way.

    I wholeheartedly agree! 

    In my experience, total artistic freedom is probably the worst thing that can happen to some of us. I think Peter Gabriel once said something along those lines, too.

  2. If there are guitar parts, unless there is a solid deadline, I NEVER finish it, although I may abandon it at some point. I can spend 2 or 3 hours recording the same verse. Come back the next session, scrap everything and start over. And again the next night. Whether it’s because the sound doesn’t seem to work or whatever else - there’s always something.

    And believe it or not, it used to be worse, because I used to feel compelled to record each guitar in a single take. I have at least managed to convince myself that I should “divide and conquer”. That being said, I cannot bring myself to do a comp out of multiple takes. Each part for each section must be one take.

    I punched into a track ONCE, the first time I went into a recording studio and was simply obeying whatever the engineer told me to do. And I still feel dirty about using that trick over 25 years later. (That and the fact that he “forced” me to record a solo using a high gain amp because my own setup just wasn’t working).

    I still cannot bring myself to re-amp. If I record using a plugin, listen to the playback and  decide to adjust the sound even just a little and add a little gain or something, I re-record everything.

    Until, at some point, I give up.

    And then I come back a few years later, listen to the song and wonder - what the heck was wrong with me? These guitars are alright. The mix sucks for sure, but the guitars aren’t the problem.

    Then I decide to have a go at the project and soon enough find myself going down that same rabbit hole.

    The funny thing is that I’ve recorded some rather sloppy players, but since it’s not me, the perspective is entirely different - I become very imaginative in terms of how I can salvage things and put together an adequate performance out of a few questionable takes or handle problematic sounding ones. I just cannot bring myself to do the same for my stuff.

    I guess that’s one of the many reasons why I don’t write guitar music that often.

    • Like 2
  3. 1 hour ago, RBH said:

     " That said, there are already kill switches in them, they are just controlled by private corporations, not the federal fellas. "

    As if knowing  - absolutely  - that there is no credible accountability in the private corporate world makes that notion better.

    I cannot speak for every manufacturer, but there are indeed mechanisms in place that allow to remotely disable ignition. Contrarily to the common misconception, it is not possible to stop the car (for obvious reasons). Not that the technology isn't there to do that, I would assume. 

    In my experience however, here in the US, there are three absolute imperatives that must be met before a vehicle is disabled: first and foremost, the owner must file a stolen vehicle report with the police. He must then communicate the report information to the manufacturer, and finally, a federal officer must request that the vehicle be immobilized - which very rarely happens in fact.

    In most cases, the police only want the car to be tracked - something which also can only be done when requested by a police officer, incidentally. At least in my experience. Likewise, information concerning the vehicle's whereabouts can only be provided to a federal officer.

    Each request needs to be thoroughly documented, with the name of everyone involved, from the precinct dispatcher's to the name and badge number of every officer working the case. 

    So yes, the technology is there, but, at this time at least, there are vast quantities of legal ramifications.

     

     

  4. 10 hours ago, kitekrazy said:

    Steinberg I guess got better.  No more dongle and 3 authorizations.

    I'm keeping my eyes on this one too. I've had the opportunity to work with it way back in the days, and I've been keeping the essential version up to date for several years but I'm thinking of upgrading to Pro, as I do like to have a back up DAW, and it's either Cubase, Pro Tools, or Studio One.

    And TBH, it really is between Cubase and Studio One. My Pro Tools license has lapsed and I don't really care to renew it.

  5. On 11/20/2023 at 7:26 AM, Grem said:

    Yep!! :)

     

    Funny your bringing this up. I have been doing some things that have brought me back to this place. It had been so long... It's a great feeling.

     

     

    A little embarrassed? Hell I would have never admitted to that!! Not here!! : )

    But since you were so honest, I will let you know your not alone!! But I would have never said it first!! jk

    About 25yrs ago I seriously thought of giving up the guitar and selling all my stuff and buying a Ultra-Lite glider airplane. Went about a year without playing. Then I started back, started writing songs, re-leaning a lot of stuff I forgot. Fast forward to today... I still don't practice as much as I did back in the day. But I am back to practicing. Getting more fluid and getting my finger/hand strength back up. Enough to be able to play the songs I come up with. 

    Glad to hear it's not just me.

    I never thought of giving up, but it seems to just happen - maybe in part because the music I write rarely features any guitar, and I don't really write on that instrument either. But I like playing, and it keeps my hands and fingers in shape. And I really like to work on improving the little things that I didn't pay as much attention to as I should have when I was younger, like my vibrato and such.

    Almost as if playing guitar and making music were two very distinct activities. But I enjoy both very much.

    • Like 1
  6. I am a little embarrassed to say that I can spend months without touching the guitar. But since I'm a creature of habits, it's usually fairly easy for me to make time for it.

    My shift ends at 4 am. I cook and eat a meal, take a power nap, head down to the home gym/dojo and workout for 40 minutes or so, then do chores and/or yard work for a bit. Then I pick up a book and read for an hour before heading back upstairs for an hour of Japanese lessons. And then, it's time to close shop, so I grab a guitar and head for the bedroom where I sit in bed in front of an anime or a Japanese movie and practice for 60-90 minutes. Before I know it, it's 10:30 and bed time.

    398260108_10160188720202582_8625104050333585566_n.thumb.jpg.de0d487cbd3b6e926c7ca8ed627f703e.jpg

    That's for practicing, and on week days - on weekends, anything goes. And of course, I also like to grab a guitar and just play at random times.

    Not quite as brilliantly as Kenny, though.

    • Like 1
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