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#1
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Heard a great story on NPR today (thurs.) about this
one-man-bluegrass-band guy in Boston, Eric Royer. Has anyone seen this guy? He grooves pretty damn nice on banjo and steel while playing guitar with his feet! ..... Throw in some vocals, harmonica, and a dancing doll and he really puts on quite a show. NPR article ........ http://discover.npr.org/features/fea...l?wfId=1330920 Royer's Website ......... http://www.guitarmachine.com/ J_West |
#2
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Kind of reminds me of Jesse Fuller, who also built a foot operated
bass (he called a fotdilla), and played it along with 12-string guitar, harmonica and kazoo on a rack, and a foot cymbal. and he sang through that bullet mic too! P h i l i p ______________________________ "I'm too ****ing busy and vice-versa" - Dorothy Parker |
#4
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You're right. Damned good group. Looks like I'm spending even more damned
money today! g Thanks for the heads up. Gave me some ideas on this country CD I'm working on that doesn't want to be a country CD, too. Hell, I might even buy a washtub and string it up now! g -- Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio 301-585-4681 "Julian Russell" wrote in message ... Eric is a friend of mine... we busk together at Faneuil Hall/Quincy Market in Boston... his one man band rig is very clever... the best one I have ever seen... bass *and* guitar strummed mechanicaly with his feet... lap steel or banjo with his hands... harmonica and vocals... and it actually sound great! Not *just a gimmick*... Check out his "real" band sometime... The Resophonics... really good stuff. Julian Russell http://magpiesound.com "Fill X" wrote in message ... Kind of reminds me of Jesse Fuller, who also built a foot operated bass (he called a fotdilla), and played it along with 12-string guitar, harmonica and kazoo on a rack, and a foot cymbal. and he sang through that bullet mic too! P h i l i p ______________________________ "I'm too ****ing busy and vice-versa" - Dorothy Parker |
#5
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Hi Julian and Mike, and everyone else. Thanks for the kind words.
I am the one man band guy. I had nothing to do with the mixing/mastering of the Resophonics record, not that I know how to do it anyway. I just went in and played the banjo. I was talking to Mike Rivers about such things and mentioned to him I like the sound of the 50's Flatt & Scruggs records, but that's a little too "retro" for most listeners today I figure, but maybe I'm wrong. I really like the 60's recordings of the Stanley Brothers, and most country and bluegrass from the 60's for that matter too, and that stuff seems to have a little more bass than the 50's stuff (in a good way). Today's typical recording sound seems too pumped up to me, I don't understand the technical side so much, but it seems artificial and exaggerated. Bass seems too loud, highs seem too crispy, etc. I question myself, wondering if I'm just being nostalgic about the old records or if they do sound better. It dosen't really matter does it? -eric |
#6
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Hi Eric
Don't get me wrong... the Resophonics record is great.... just *loud* and perhaps modern ... BTW... "head like a cantalope" has been in my brain for a while now. I question myself, wondering if I'm just being nostalgic about the old records or if they do sound better. They sound better It dosen't really matter does it? Does in these parts! see you at NM7 (ahem...that's a cool insider thing) Julian Russell http://magpiesound.com "Eric Royer" wrote in message om... Hi Julian and Mike, and everyone else. Thanks for the kind words. I am the one man band guy. I had nothing to do with the mixing/mastering of the Resophonics record, not that I know how to do it anyway. I just went in and played the banjo. I was talking to Mike Rivers about such things and mentioned to him I like the sound of the 50's Flatt & Scruggs records, but that's a little too "retro" for most listeners today I figure, but maybe I'm wrong. I really like the 60's recordings of the Stanley Brothers, and most country and bluegrass from the 60's for that matter too, and that stuff seems to have a little more bass than the 50's stuff (in a good way). Today's typical recording sound seems too pumped up to me, I don't understand the technical side so much, but it seems artificial and exaggerated. Bass seems too loud, highs seem too crispy, etc. I question myself, wondering if I'm just being nostalgic about the old records or if they do sound better. It dosen't really matter does it? -eric |
#7
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#8
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In article znr1058397533k@trad, Mike Rivers wrote:
At the Smithsonian Folklife Festival this year, one of the bands in the Appalachia program was the East Tennesee State Univiersity bluegrass band. They played around one mic and the two times I saw them, plus a radio broadcast (probably from the PA comsole at that stage) they sounded like a bunch of individual soloists accompanied by a bass - the bass had a pickup and was, IMHO, always too loud and too "bloomy" for this sort of band. Part of this probably has to do with the acoustics in that tent just being really awful. But the engineer mixing at that stage has plenty of experience with this sort of music and I'm sure did the best job he could with what came into the mic. Was this Charlie? He's a good guy but there's only so much you can do in a tent with an area mike. The old records sound great, but then so did the old masters. We have some really great bluegrass singers and pickers today, but only about as many good bands as there ever were (which suggests that a whole lot of really good musicians are in so-so bands). So, why didn't you drop by at the Folklife Festival? You never left Appalachia? Chakaal wound up giving an old computer to a fellow from Mali... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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