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Old Joad

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Everything posted by Old Joad

  1. Hope you don't mind if I add one in, just watched this one and it was pretty good. Mick Fleetwood took me to Ghana:
  2. Otis is cool, nice and mellow and a great storyteller.
  3. Hopefully things will chill out at some point and lɐʍd can stop changing his name 😁
  4. 😌Crisis averted.. Quavo, Lenny Kravitz - FLY:
  5. I know it's not what you're supposed to do, but Eskil Simonsson isn't trying to project his vocal on this track. Your vocal isn't bad👍🏼 and not that I'm some great singer🤔 but when I'm singing with a band "Sugar Crash" I try to project my voice across the room, but when I sang on "Ache" the band played quit and i sang from my throat.
  6. Actress Teri Garr, known for her first breakout role in Young Frankenstein where she starred as Inga, Dr. Frederick Frankenstein's assistant. If you've never seen the movie watch it, if you have, watch it again👍
  7. I'm blown away by this performance, excellent song😎👍🏼 BTW I left my comments on your YOUTUBE channel.
  8. Between sets one night in 1965, Jerry Garcia asked a lapsed trumpet player if he would consider learning how to play the bass. His band, the Warlocks, was looking for a new bass player—the guy they had been working with had to be told which notes to play. Even though the trumpet player, Phil Lesh, didn’t play the bass, Garcia believed he could find the notes. What happened next happened fast. Lesh took to the bass quickly, and the Warlocks became the Grateful Dead. Within two years, they had released their debut album, “The Grateful Dead” (1967). And by the summer of 1969, they were on stage at Woodstock, well on their way to becoming one of the most identifiable, successful and divisive bands of their generation. Lesh—whose death, Friday, at the age of 84, was announced on his Instagram account (no cause was given)—helped write a few of the Dead’s most popular songs during the band’s 30-year run, including “St. Stephen” and “Truckin’.” But his greatest contribution was what his unique style of bass playing—developed outside of traditional training and influence—did to the band’s sound. “What makes them essentially a dance band probably begins with the jazz classical bassist, Phil Lesh, and the Elvin Jones-influenced (drummer) Bill Kreutzmann,” Bob Dylan wrote in “The Philosophy of Modern Song” in 2022. “Lesh is one of the most skilled bassists you’ll ever hear in subtlety and invention.” Lesh wanted to invent every night. Unlike most of its contemporaries, the Dead’s work in the studio was just the starting gun, source material for improvised explorations and extended musical conversations between band members in concert. Lesh told Relix magazine that he approached the stage as if “everything is possible” and that “nothing that’s gone before has any relevance at all.” “What you can do is prepare yourself to be open; open for the pipeline to open and the magic to flow down through us,” he told the magazine. “It means leaving yourself behind. It’s not a question of, Oh God, don’t let me f— up, or anything like that. It’s a question of: Here I am. Work me, Lord.”
  9. Get yourself a Shure Beta 58A mic, they are very forgiving (basically you can eat the damn thing) and still sound pretty good. It kind of sounds like you're under the microscope, let the phrase "Good enough for government work" be your mantra😎👍🏼
  10. I was kind of surprised how weak Billy Idols vocal was, and Jelly Roll was way out of tune. But thought Jack Black did a great job🤘
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