Creedence Clearwater Revival: C or D?

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Their albums are a bit light. All very short. Don't really have the depth past the singles.

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:36 (twenty-one years ago) link

Yes, but the point is they've got so many damn good songs, you end up with about 6 or 7 songs that you know and one or two that you don't. I wouldn't live without the albums, and without tracks like "Ramble Tamble", "Porterville", "Effigy" and "Keep On Chooglin'" ... Jesus Christ, just reading that list ... depth?! Whatever, I guess I'm just an unreconstructed rockist.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

I want to hate them on principle but, really, they sound OK when the radio plays them. I used to think they were boring but I don't mind them now. I'm not about to buy a CD or anything but they seem all right.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

I want to hate them on principle

On principle of what, disliking good music?

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

Total classic. Great songs (often a real and worthy antidote/counterweight to the more soft-headed bourgie impulses of '60s pop/rock), a great singer, and one of the best--and definitely most undersung--rhythm sections in all of rock music. Just cause it sounds simple doesn't mean it's easy.

Lee G (Lee G), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:49 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'm not saying they're bad albums, I love Creedence too... but you know, comparing to Beggars Banquet and Let It Bleed... I don't think so...

Take Willy and the Poor Boys--Poorboy Shuffle and Side O' the Road are throwaways.

Green River--same goes for Cross Tie Walker, Sinister Purpose, Night Time is the Right Time.

I just remember really really loving the greatest hits when I was a kid. And then buying all the albums, and liking them, but being slightly disappointed that there weren't any real amazing finds beyond the singles.

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

I have the singles comp and I like it. Rock was pretty good in the 60s.

Tom (Groke), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

"Green River--same goes for Cross Tie Walker, Sinister Purpose, Night Time is the Right Time."

No way, I think all those songs are great, just as strong as the singles. The harmonies on "Night Time" are this really strong, deep thing. "Sinister Purpose" is totally creepy, it's like a prelude to a murder down by the river or something.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 19:59 (twenty-one years ago) link

Not much more to say than classic.

hstencil, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

Sinister Purpose I don't remember too well, to be honest. The good ones stick in my head ;) For me, Night Time was just too trad, dad. Actually, that's probably my problem with the album stuff in general--they seemed to just be doing straight knock-offs of older forms there in order to prove some kind of country authenticity, whereas the singles were like proper rock 'n' roll and although they had the old time flavor, they were also something different. A fusion, rather than a pastiche... or something.

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:05 (twenty-one years ago) link

Take Willy and the Poor Boys--Poorboy Shuffle and Side O' the Road are throwaways

you could say the same of "Factory Girl" and "Dear Doctor," too, though I agree that CCR's albums aren't as good as the Stones'. oh, and the answer is TOTAL CLASSIC.

M Matos (M Matos), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

No, you couldn't say the same!

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

(Actually you have an easier case with Beggars anyway... try knocking anything off Let It Bleed... now if only they'd put the single version of Honky Tonk Women on there instead of Country Honk)

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

Classic. Their best cuts: "Lodi," "Wrote a Song for Everyone," "Fortunate Son," "Have You Ever Seen the Rain" and "Effigy."

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:11 (twenty-one years ago) link

I hear your point Ben, and I'd agree that there are a couple filler type tracks in the catalog (but not awful ones, i.e. not ones to make you hit the skip button). I just think that the album cuts that are strong, argue for reconsidering them as more of an album band rather than a singles band.

And I was going to make the point about the Stones, but Matos made it for me. Except that I would have mentioned "Country Honk", and that he is TOTALLY wrong about "Factory Girl". That is one of the high points of that lp! It was great when they dug it up for the Steel Wheels tour...

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Agreed, it's not like I don't like the albums, I just like arguing...

(Also, the thing that makes songs like Dear Doctor et al more interesting to me is that they are not done straight--Jagger always has a distance from the material, and the lyrics themselves are somewhat ambiguous/parodistic, which makes the songs a bit more interesting since you don't know how seriously to take them)

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:38 (twenty-one years ago) link

here's an argument: CCR kicks the Stones six ways from Saturday because they took mountain and country music as their stepping-off point AS WELL as Chicago blues - I am Southern and raised on a diet of Hazel Dickens and etc so this goes a long way with me - CCR annealed it all into a singular, totally unmistakable, champion sound. agreed that Jagger was surely one of the most mythological characters in all rock - CCR never had that mystique, if that's the kind of thing you go for - but i mean seriously, the Stones sound like copyists next to them (Brian Jones: "no other group is as close to the Negro sound as us"). particularly good and interesting copyists, sure, "it's what the Stones got WRONG just as much as what they got RIGHT" etc but with CCR it's totally about what they got right, full stop.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:47 (twenty-one years ago) link

I used to think they were the most boring 60's band ever. Then something changed and now I think they're not bad... who knows why. I like "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" a lot.

Vinnie (vprabhu), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

good points Tracer.

christoff (christoff), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 20:59 (twenty-one years ago) link

I dunno man, I just hear it the other way 'round. I think Fogarty is just as much a copyist as the Stones are--difference is, he's playing one role, country boy, whereas for Jagger that's one mask among others (an approach which admittedly over the course of far too long has gotten really tiresome, but paid serious dividends back in the day). I'm not from the South, but I sure can't take Fogerty seriously when he's howling in that affected voice about riding the ol' riverboat queen, or posing on album covers busking with Willy and the Poor Boys on the side of the street. So I don't find Creedence any more authentic than the Stones, really--difference is that the Stones are honest about their lack of authenticity, and they make use of that as an aesthetic strategy (also, they drew on plenty more sources than just Chicago blues).

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:03 (twenty-one years ago) link

Well Brian Jones can make such a declaration as he could supposedly play slide on "Dust My Broom" as well as Elmore James could.

As to yr main point -- I agree that the influx of country and mountain music is more important and successful with CCR than it is the Stones (although the Stones' double country whammy of "Dead Flowers" and "Sweet Virginia" kicks all of CCR's ass halfway to Modesto), but CCR's blues infusion feels kinda weak to me. I'm thinking of the middle bits of Willy & the Poor Boys here, and while Johnny can do a fair sharecropper impression with that yelp of his, it falls flat. It just seems that the Stones wanted to get the Negro strut down more than anything (which Mick still works at but Keith was born with), to get the style and the feel, while CCR went for the sound, but not the emotion. Maybe this is why CCR is so commonly identified as a very "white" band? (I'm thinking of the Big Lebowski and White Men Can't Jump (Snipes hassles Woody for them, doesn't he?) in particular)

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

(I was going to say, kind of speaking to the same thing, Mick had a great guitarist and drummer behind him... Fogarty is kind of a one-man band, unfortunately.)

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:08 (twenty-one years ago) link

On principle of what, disliking good music?

On principle of not relating to rootsy Americana trad-rock boredom, which then gets shoved in your face as real authentic 'good' music. The whole rough-and-ready meat-and-potatoes-ness of it all. Of hating country music like any well-adjusted person. Like I said, though, they don't actually sound that bad. It's all pettiness.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

They don't do it for me; sorry to break up the consensus. Fogerty's earnest growl grates, and the backing music is dull dull dull. I mean, if you're going to have a backing band that sounds like session hacks, you might as well have 'em play something interesting. There's something else, too. I even like a few of their singles pretty okay, but there's something about the aura that surrounds them that turns me off big-time.

Clarke B., Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

Like, I relate to what Vinnie said except I still don't have any specific song I can point to and say that I love it. But they're all not that bad now.

Clarke just butted in but I know what he means about the aura.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

Oh jesus christ, why even ask. Fucking classic.

mosurock (mosurock), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:29 (twenty-one years ago) link

I like the songs I singled out, too, as well as the Willy ones Ben pointed out. I just think that each pair filled the same function on each album.

Tracer roxor as always, even if I do think the Stones were ultimately a...not "better" but greater band, if you see what I mean--wider ranging (counts for a lot w/me, Prince was my formative listening) and more chance-taking. CCR's more perfect but the Stones had greater outreach. love 'em both about equally in that way

M Matos (M Matos), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

It's all pettiness

You can't say something like "I dislike them on principle", on this board of all places, and not expect to be called out on the meaninglessness of the statement unless you define your terms.

Of hating country music like any well-adjusted person

Color me ill-adjusted.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

I meant that my reasons are petty. I said that I want to dislike them not that I actually do.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:37 (twenty-one years ago) link

For the purposes of the authenticity debate, I gotta say that CCR is definitely more "authentic" than the Stones. That can be a positive or negative thing depending on what side of the fence you're on, but I don't think there can be any argument that the Stones were actors, pure and simple (very good ones at their peak) - whereas Fogerty and Co. really *were* blue-collar nobodies from the sticks. I can tell you exactly where the market on the Willie and the Poorboys cover is (it's right next to their warehouse studio). California from San Francisco to the Oregon border *does* have a lot of green rivers, even a swamp or two, and country music, etc. The Stones couldn't have been farther removed from American country/black r&b (had Jagger and Richards even *been* to America when they started up their schtick?), whereas Fogerty grew up with it in the Central California Valley. That shit is THERE, it was something they soaked up playing up and down the state for 10 years prior to "making it".

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:39 (twenty-one years ago) link

I hate all the authenticity talk that goes on about them too.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

Was it in Stanley Booth's Stones book that he says that the photos of war-ravaged British children from WW2 could easily have been McCartney or Lennon or Jagger or Richards and this is why they identified so strongly with U.S. blues music?

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

CCR much more of a SINGLES act than the Stones (or rather, the Stones became much better at making full, complete albs around the same time that CCR first started releasing albs themselves) - their 'Best Of' (or whatever) CD is a pretty flawless nugget of country-pop-rock, but it's prob. all you really 'need' for everyday listening purposes. I can never make up my mind if the long versh of 'I Heard It Through The Grapevine' is godawful or not. I KNOW their versh of 'Suzy Q' isn't a patch on the orig. I like their ballads as much as their rockers, but am notso into their swamp rock side ('Run Through The Jungle', the done-to-death 'Proud Mary'.)

Andrew L (Andrew L), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

Re authenticity: Not so much arguing on class grounds, or that they didn't come from the region they sang about... it just always seemed to me that they were evoking, idealizing and acting as if they were part of, an era that must surely have been mostly gone by the time they came along...

I agree with Andrew L about Grapevine... their ultimate endless boogie track was Back on the Bayou

Ben Williams, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 21:48 (twenty-one years ago) link

Classic.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 23:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Another note in the Stones vs. CCR debate: the J.C Fogerty-led
entity known as Creedence Clearwater Revival only existed for
about four years, 67-71 - who knows what Fogerty could have
continued to achieve if he hadn't been stuck with retarded
bandmates (see Mardi Gras) and a hellish, leech-like record label.
After all, would the Stones be remembered today if they broke
up in 1967?

Also due to the demands of their label, Fogerty released 3
albums in 1969 and two in 1970, ranking from good to excellent.
Imagine what dynamite albums they could have released on a
one-per-year schedule:

Bayou Country
01. Born On The Bayou
02. Good Golly Miss Molly
03. Proud Mary
04. Green River
05. Bad Moon Rising
06. Lodi
07. Wrote A Song For Everyone
08. Don't Look Now
09. Down On The Corner
10. Fortunate Son
11. Midnight Special

Cosmo's Factory
01. Before You Accuse Me
02. Travelin' Band
03. Lookin' Out My Back Door
04. Run Through The Jungle
05. Up Around The Bend
06. Who'll Stop The Rain
07. Long As I Can See The Light
08. Have You Ever Seen The Rain?
09. Hey Tonight
10. Molina

I'll go on the record as saying that these two proposed
tracklists kick every Stones album directly in the ass.

Squirlplise, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 23:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

i like em despite the endlessly awful writing and thinking they seem to cause, to this day

strictly speaking they are of course anti-rockist

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 28 January 2003 23:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

"strictly speaking they are of course anti-rockist "

explain.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 28 January 2003 23:49 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'll leave that for mark s (chiz), but let's get this straight: there's 3 levels: 1) where you talk about who's more authentic and why 2) where you go on about how "authenticity" is a rub word to begin with, unless you're talking about counterfeit money or something and 3) where we need to get to, i.e. where we don't talk about it at all.

CCR playing the Stones game: doesn't exist; Stones playing CCR's game: "Midnight Rambler" CASE CLOSED

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:10 (twenty-one years ago) link

Stones playing CCR's game: "Midnight Rambler"

I don't get this one.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

above all that they cared abt singles rather than LPs, and were definitely counter the big-art-statement faux adult sensibility of the times — the songs were tight and sort of just there, rather than constructed and worked over and part of some brave new post-beatles counterculture world

also i think that the music they minded about was music that ROCK AS IT BECAME AWARE OF ITSELF was trying to put behind it, or get beyond, or something

like in the late 60s, a LOT of music — pop and non-pop — from the 50s and early 60s was widely considered a bit of a primitive yokel joke: and i think they clung to it in quite a lonely, dogged way...

this later (80s etc) became for others a revivalist shtick which played super-well in music mags etc — grrr the clash haha — and part of the general dad-rock cd-rerelease spasm, but these were the years when rock was in its prime and needed no memory, or anyway a sense of its own HISTORY was not yet at all important to its essential identity

(sorry this probably isn't very clear: i think what i'm saying is that the content of "revival" in their name and aesthetic — partly bcz it wz half ironic, in a bitter sort of way — was that it refused to place faith in these huge PLACEMARKER WORKS, dylan/beatles/stones blah blah, which stood in the way of understanding where they themselves as works came from, and provided the glue of the music community all round, the values it shared...)

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

i don't know, it kind of choogles along a bit don't it?

(by "don't talk about it at all" i of course mean "talk about it MORE" i.e. use other words please)

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

babelfish to thread

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:15 (twenty-one years ago) link

"where we need to get to, i.e. where we don't talk about it at all."

Guess I shouldn't have used the term "poseur" in the question then. But really, it's when the Stones were brought in that the "authenticity" topic raised its ugly head (mostly because for some reason people find the Stones' toying with the whole concept to be such a stroke of genius - though I don't share this view personally).

re: Mark S. I see what you're saying I guess. Regressive traditionalist attitude = anti-rockist. I like their albums but no argument that they were a singles band, their albums are not deliberately constructed as statements (a la Blonde on Blonde or Her Satanic Majesties' ad nauseum).

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:19 (twenty-one years ago) link

It doesn't look like "authentic" is listed in that "Use Other Words Please" thread...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

yes, except i don't think it WAS regressive or traditionalist, at least in CCR's heads: bcz it was just what they did (and actually also they don't sound SO much like whatever the tradition is that they're cleaving to, so it was never some careful copycat thing... )

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Creedence Clearwater undeniably tops in my book. That warm glowing feeling extends now to include Fogarty's Premonition ... So count me in for Classicos.

bflaska, Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

haha four LPs in a year!! that's POP!!

i'm tempted to say that i don't think they thought about or cared about LASTING (possibly also why they got screwed over re ownership of their songs?) (i mean this may have been just naivety, and i don't mean to sentimentalise or romanticise some kind of po'boy live-in-the-now nonsense, but sometimes not second-guessing how the future will see you gives you access to a power to speak in the present which actually hands the future to you... )

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

mark, I think you're making some kind of unfair (and inaccurate) presumptions about Fogerty and Co. here. For instance from what I've read the group was *very* conscientious about choosing their name, and in particular the "Revival" tag was something Fogerty wanted to use to evoke both old-school revival tent-preachers and the 50s r&b that he rather unashamedly grew up on. As for caring about "lasting" I think they certainly did - Fogerty talks on and on about his studio perfectionism and things like his "no encores" policy as being part of cementing a legend for himself. How could someone who talks about themselves in the third person *not* be conscientious of image/history/legacy whatever...?

The Fantasy/Saul Zaentz debacle is a whole other issue...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

Authenticity to me means your art reflects your life, simple as that. I pay much more attention to it when people claim it than when they don't. Doth Fogarty protest too much, or was he jes' playing the music he loved? A bit of both I think, but I don't mind giving him the benefit of the doubt.

Ben Williams, Wednesday, 29 January 2003 00:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

Seems to be a lot of Shakey on ILX today...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKRZc2M_zQA

Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Wednesday, 12 April 2023 17:45 (one year ago) link

Whole lotta Shakey Goin' On

doja catharsis (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 12 April 2023 17:56 (one year ago) link

How is it possible that I'd never heard of the UK's number one singles-selling artist of the '80s until now?

o. nate, Thursday, 13 April 2023 15:08 (one year ago) link

two weeks pass...

Saw Fogerty tonight - I can't remember the last time I've seen a senior-age father have so much fun with his kids. Two of his sons played with him tonight with one acting as second guitarist (rhythm with occasional lead) and it was pretty awesome watching them trade phrases at one point. Just prior to that, he played a song for his wife, and that was accompanied by a photo collage of his family spanning 30+ years - some taken at public events but most of them were clearly personal photos, showing things like family vacations, posing at home, etc. This was definitely a very close family and I came away from the show thinking he must've had an incredibly happy domestic life these past 30 years. (Perhaps more remarkable considering his falling out with his brother.)

birdistheword, Saturday, 29 April 2023 05:11 (eleven months ago) link

Forgot, he also dug up a couple of great tracks off Willy and the Poor Boys - "Effigy" and "It Came Out of the Sky," arguably the two best that weren't put out on a single. Neither had been played for almost 20 years before this tour.

birdistheword, Saturday, 29 April 2023 05:14 (eleven months ago) link

Thanks for posting - that set list is impossibly great. Just noticed that he's playing Saturday night at the LA County Fair in Pomona in a week and tickets are relatively inexpensive.

Elvis Telecom, Saturday, 29 April 2023 09:45 (eleven months ago) link

Was there choogling?

Ice cubist (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 29 April 2023 11:45 (eleven months ago) link

dammit no PNW dates, this sounds great

Perverted By Linguiça (sleeve), Saturday, 29 April 2023 14:16 (eleven months ago) link

huh the red rocks date is listed as "the string cheese incident with john fogerty." the fuck is that on string cheese can fill redrocks with boulder douches any day, why are they in this

Laurie Anderson’s Singing Bowl Migraine Orchestra (Hunt3r), Saturday, 29 April 2023 14:29 (eleven months ago) link

Was there choogling?

Hah, YES! "Keep On Chooglin'" was where Fogerty was trading phrases with his son for a good bit of the song!

Also should mention a few more things:

1) This is the first time he's touring as the legal owner of his songs - I think that made him extra happy as it was mentioned several times.

2) Also, for a good selection of songs, he played with a guitar he used at Woodstock, including at least one classic that he wrote on it - after CCR broke up, some kid went up to him and asked if he could have one of guitars, and Fogerty in an admitted crazy move gave him that guitar gratis. Then like 45 years later, his wife asked him whatever happened to it, and he was too embarrassed to say. So without him knowing, she tracked it down and wrapped it for him as a surprise Christmas present.

3) He told the audience he had a special guest bassist for their final encore. Turns out, he didn't go far to get them, only one more block at Rockefeller Center - it was NBC news anchor Lester Holt.

birdistheword, Sunday, 30 April 2023 00:08 (eleven months ago) link

eight months pass...

This two CD mono ‘Singles Collection’ sounds so awesome. Wish I would have got it before. Just like with the Stones mono box, the original mono singles just thump.

Cosmo’s drumming definitely has the Phil Rudd and Charlie Watts beat the beat into the ground. Drums sound so much better on these old 60s mono mixes compared to the stereo ones.

The Artist formerly known as Earlnash, Thursday, 4 January 2024 15:28 (three months ago) link

two weeks pass...

I just treated myself to this set and absolutely agree.

My whole family sat around listening to the difference between the remastered Spotify version of Green River and the mono single. Consensus was that the remastered stereo version sounds “more polished” but the mono version’s “got that dog” in it

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 19 January 2024 22:56 (two months ago) link

After that I treated them to a 2-hour discourse on vinyl mastering which they all listened to in rapt fascination, best night of their lives

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 19 January 2024 22:57 (two months ago) link

ok sold

what is the DVD material from?

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Friday, 19 January 2024 23:00 (two months ago) link

also lol tracer, that was an xp so I could not properly appreciate your tart self-deprecation

but it's all true, mono 45s rule

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Friday, 19 January 2024 23:01 (two months ago) link

I love well made compilations like that. Will be on the lookout.

brimstead, Friday, 19 January 2024 23:01 (two months ago) link

is there DVD material? i just have the 45s.

the booklet that comes with it is sadly pretty useless. written like a beginner's potted history. surely anyone enough of a lunatic to buy this is Heavily Into Creedence and wants session notes, oral histories etc

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 19 January 2024 23:22 (two months ago) link

ohh ok there is I guess a bonus DVD with the 2xCD set? which is what I got b/c cheap

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Friday, 19 January 2024 23:23 (two months ago) link

Lol Tracer. Fwiw I would legit listen if you recorded that as a podcast

Wine not? (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 19 January 2024 23:43 (two months ago) link

FWIW, Russ Gary (the engineer) once posted on another forum that the Green River singles are true dedicated mixes. The mono single mix for the song "Green River" alone really is amazing. Everything else might be folds though.

birdistheword, Saturday, 20 January 2024 03:24 (two months ago) link

what are folds?

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 20 January 2024 09:46 (two months ago) link

Mono mixes that are electronically converted from the original stereo, rather than being mixed specifically to mono, or "dedicated" to mono.

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 20 January 2024 13:56 (two months ago) link

There used to be a button on stereo systems that would do this.

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 20 January 2024 13:57 (two months ago) link

It was right next to the Loudness button iirc

Pictish in the Woods (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 20 January 2024 14:02 (two months ago) link

My Bluetooth headphones sometimes accidentally do those folds sometimes. Really a trip when listening to Olivia Rodrigo or something else clearly not mixed that way.

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 20 January 2024 17:39 (two months ago) link

Bluetooth sometimes seems to have a mind of its own imho.

Pictish in the Woods (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 20 January 2024 17:45 (two months ago) link

In my experience

Pictish in the Woods (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 20 January 2024 17:45 (two months ago) link

there's a mono setting on android - works pretty neat

corrs unplugged, Sunday, 21 January 2024 11:24 (two months ago) link

Gonna listen to "Rude Awakening #2" all day brb

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 21 January 2024 14:58 (two months ago) link

This compilation is on Tidal, and yeah, it sounds great. Might have to pick up a physical copy for the living room.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Sunday, 21 January 2024 16:56 (two months ago) link

just ordered the mono singles comp, excited to hear it #deathtostereo

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 21 January 2024 18:15 (two months ago) link

My Bluetooth headphones sometimes accidentally do those folds sometimes. Really a trip when listening to Olivia Rodrigo or something else clearly not mixed that way.


That’s a feature of the Brian Wilson model

calstars, Sunday, 21 January 2024 18:33 (two months ago) link

bluefolded

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 21 January 2024 18:44 (two months ago) link


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