Sparx
elvis ramone
Posts: 6
|
Post by Sparx on Oct 17, 2004 20:33:06 GMT 1
Hello I would like to know if anyone have noticed the same as me. The issue is that some of Mogwai's songs contain two different tracks in the same track. Fx. try to listen to Killing All the Flies two times. One time with only with only one of the speakers (Left or right speaker, you decide). Killing all the Flies contains two versions of the same song, one for the right speaker, and one for the left speaker. Pretty nice though. You can also try it with the track, Cody. Cody actually contains two different songs, while Killing all the Flies contain two different versions... - Hope you'll understand my "gibberish"
|
|
|
Post by gus on Oct 19, 2004 19:35:01 GMT 1
im sure its just the way the tracks are mixed, with several guitar melodies, bass and various blips & bleeps you probably could divide those songs into two different compositions
but i dont think ts intentional
|
|
|
Post by iain egg on Oct 19, 2004 22:08:21 GMT 1
not trying to be a killjoy or anything but it's the case with loads of albums that are mixed in that way...just depends on how the parts are separated in the stereo.
|
|
|
Post by thoughton on Nov 4, 2004 18:41:18 GMT 1
correct me if i'm wrong, but didn't spiritualized do something like this - a completely different mix per channel - for pure phase electric mainline, to give it that wonderfully dreamy, slightly-out-of-phase sound?
|
|
|
Post by JebusSabes on Nov 18, 2004 17:34:07 GMT 1
I created an mp3 of 'Cody' (the song) a while back, with just the left (or was it right?) channel copied into both channels, so you only heard guitar and Stuart's vocals. Gorgeous, it was.
Velvet Underground's 'The Gift' is another famous example.
|
|
|
Post by Fiddler on Nov 20, 2004 5:24:28 GMT 1
Aye Jebsus I did that also.. tis lovely when played rEAl loud in the car while driving..
|
|