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#41
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: I finally had a chance to read the interview. They really captured his essence. They didn't really talk very much about philosophy at all. They talked a little bit about what he did, but they didn't really talk very much about why he did things. Not in any detail, anyway. I think that's kind of a shame, but even so it was one of the better interviews I have seen with him. It's the only one I remember. When I said "essence", I probably should have said "personality". I can just hear him saying the things he said in the interview. As far as the "secretive" nature that people talk about, I never realized he was any more secretive than the next guy. But, like I said, he's not promoted all over the place, like say, "Mixerman". |
#42
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"Don Cooper" wrote in message
... As far as the "secretive" nature that people talk about, I never realized he was any more secretive than the next guy. He seems to be. When someone from NPR interviewed him, she clapped her hands at the beginning just to test the system. According to her, Van Gelder freaked out, demanded that she give him the tape (DAT), and gave her a new one to record on instead. He didn't want even the slightest record of what his studio's response was like. He also made the ground rules for the interview that he would not, under any circumstances, discuss what his techniques were. I assume the same ground rules applied to the TapeOp interview. Peace, Paul |
#43
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Don Cooper wrote:
As far as the "secretive" nature that people talk about, I never realized he was any more secretive than the next guy. It's possible that his reluctance to talk about technique might just be because he wants to talk about philosophy and thinks technique follows directly from philosophy. I don't know, but I'd like to be able to ask him someday. But, like I said, he's not promoted all over the place, like say, "Mixerman". He was, fifty years ago. But then, the jazz community back then was a very small one too. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#44
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#46
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Mike Rivers wrote:
I guess that when you don't do a whole lot more than get a bunch of great musicans in a room with good acoustics, if people don't think you have a secret to making a good recording, they'll stop talking about you. Still...secret method or not Dr.Van Gelder's recordings did have a certain *tone* to them. I agree with you though...not much point in investigating the how's and why's of it. -- Nathan "Imagine if there were no Hypothetical Situations" |
#47
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1097409320k@trad... In article writes: As far as the "secretive" nature that people talk about, I never realized he was any more secretive than the next guy. I guess that when you don't do a whole lot more than get a bunch of great musicans in a room with good acoustics, if people don't think you have a secret to making a good recording, they'll stop talking about you. That's kind of what I was thinking. Maybe all the weird behavior (like taking the tape where the lady clapped) is to generate mystique (not that he needs it). |
#49
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message
... I don't understand what he is so paranoid about. He also made wonderful recordings in the Village Vanguard, and in what was at the time his mother's living room. Surely those locations are much easier to get impulse responses from (and I am sure whoever owns what was his mother's house would be willing to engage in a short study)? And what would that tell us anyway? --scott Well, if a person makes great recordings in three "random" rooms I'd say the room is not the greatest common denominator in the equation. He must know something. |
#51
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1097430025k@trad... In article FVdad.216309$MQ5.149566@attbi_s52 writes: I guess that when you don't do a whole lot more than get a bunch of great musicans in a room with good acoustics, if people don't think you have a secret to making a good recording, they'll stop talking about you. That's kind of what I was thinking. Maybe all the weird behavior (like taking the tape where the lady clapped) is to generate mystique (not that he needs it). Someone told me that Joe Maphis (jazzy country guitar player from the '50s) would sometimes drape a handkerchief over his fretting hand so people couldn't see what he was playing. I never saw that, but I can believe the story. For years now on my live jazz recordings I use nearly identical xlr connectors on either end of the mic cables so when they are plugged in it is difficult for the casual observer to know which direction I'm running the cables. ![]() |
#52
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Charles Tomaras wrote:
For years now on my live jazz recordings I use nearly identical xlr connectors on either end of the mic cables so when they are plugged in it is difficult for the casual observer to know which direction I'm running the cables. ![]() Yep it's so hard to see those arrows in the dark. -- ha |
#53
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Charles Tomaras wrote:
For years now on my live jazz recordings I use nearly identical xlr connectors on either end of the mic cables so when they are plugged in it is difficult for the casual observer to know which direction I'm running the cables. ![]() Yep it's so hard to see those arrows in the dark. -- ha Of course, if you put a loop in the cable then the sound goes both ways and it people can't figure it out. That's how the original loop got started. :) --Wayne -"sounded good to me"- |
#54
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1097409320k@trad... I guess that when you don't do a whole lot more than get a bunch of great musicans in a room with good acoustics, if people don't think you have a secret to making a good recording, they'll stop talking about you. He records in a freakin' pyramid... how much more cryptic can you get than that? Anubis is looking over his shoulder every moment, shouldn't he be secretive? lol ![]() Neil Henderson |
#55
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"Ricky W. Hunt" wrote:
Maybe all the weird behavior is to generate mystique Another applicable behavior: there are Hammond organ players who don't allow anyone else to see what drawbar settings they use. -- Jonathan Roberts * guitar, keyboards, vocals * North River Preservation ---------------------------------------------- To reach me reverse: moc(dot)xobop(at)ggestran |
#56
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"Jonathan Roberts" wrote in message
... "Ricky W. Hunt" wrote: Maybe all the weird behavior is to generate mystique Another applicable behavior: there are Hammond organ players who don't allow anyone else to see what drawbar settings they use. I once heard that in truth there's only about 8 settings that organ players use. Musicians are a superstitious lot. |
#57
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Jonathan Roberts wrote:
"Ricky W. Hunt" wrote: Maybe all the weird behavior is to generate mystique Another applicable behavior: there are Hammond organ players who don't allow anyone else to see what drawbar settings they use. I worked with a jazz drummer who had a secret thing that he covered with a handkerchief and clipped between the beater and the head of the kick. He refused to let anyone know what it was, but whatever it was or did, he sounded better than anyone else who played that kit. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#58
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#59
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Jonathan Roberts wrote: "Ricky W. Hunt" wrote: Maybe all the weird behavior is to generate mystique Another applicable behavior: there are Hammond organ players who don't allow anyone else to see what drawbar settings they use. I worked with a jazz drummer who had a secret thing that he covered with a handkerchief and clipped between the beater and the head of the kick. He refused to let anyone know what it was, but whatever it was or did, he sounded better than anyone else who played that kit. --scott It was a photograph of Van Gelder. -- -- John Noll Retromedia Sound Studios Red Bank, NJ http://www.retromedia.net |
#60
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: But, like I said, he's not promoted all over the place, like say, "Mixerman". He was, fifty years ago. But then, the jazz community back then was a very small one too. Well, there's a lot I don't know about him, and never thought to ask. |
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