lukpac wrote:I just pulled out the DE of LAL. I'd really like to know what they did to it - other than perhaps Amazing Journey/Sparks, Tommy just sounds *BAD*. It's like everything was recorded inside of a tin can or something.
Because of this thread, I was thinking about this very thing (but I don't have a copy of the DE. I heard a borrowed copy, and I was offered it for free. I declined).
The only reason Amazing Journey/Sparks sounds good is because it was lifted from the 95. But I would't be surprised to find, in a close comparison, that they tried to "improve" that one, too. As for the rest of Tommy, all I can think of is that is they used a different (easier) method to get rid of the crackles, which ended up destroying the sound. It doesn't just sound bad, it sounds damaged.
What I'd
really like to know is how this sound was approved by everyone involved. Was it one of those deals where everyone sorta looked at each other, and someone opined that "hey, this is the kind of sound that the kids like." And everyone just shrugged their shoulders and left.
But if that's the case, why didn't they go back and redo Amazing Journey, if only to get it to match?
I should really re-do LALC one of these years. Anyone know of a *good* pitch correction tool?
I played around with the one on Cool Edit. I first tried to speed up a whole track -- and IMO the sound was noticeably degraded. I did successfully, however, fix the first few notes of Voodoo Child from the Fillmore East album, where Hendrix starts off in the wrong key....which lasted only about a second. I get the impression that the simpler the sound (like a solo instrument vs the whole band) and the shorter the duration, the less audible the repair.