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Day 1, album #3? - Printable Version +- Haley Reinhart Forum (http://haleyfans.com) +-- Forum: Topics (http://haleyfans.com/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Haley Reinhart (http://haleyfans.com/forum-11.html) +--- Thread: Day 1, album #3? (/thread-2494.html) |
RE: Day 1, album #3? - JMT - 02-10-2017 (02-10-2017, 01:26 PM)Tusk Wrote: Everything about HR3 has been different from previous albums. Didn't she say her goal was to have it ready to support for the Euro tour? Seems in line to do that. I expect a few reveals once we get into March. This fact alone has led me to the conclusion (hope) that this album is supported by an established label-- as I see it as the next logical progression in Haley's career. But who knows? I don't follow closely enough (or the history) of other singers/bands to know if they typically 'preview' songs to try them out before the record is dropped. Is that very common? RE: Day 1, album #3? - Tusk - 02-11-2017 ![]() Quote:haleyreinhart RE: Day 1, album #3? - Tusk - 02-15-2017 (02-08-2017, 04:19 PM)Miguel Wrote: "New Album Inspiration" Was posting vids on Twitter when it struck me how much this duet Caley performed at Idyllwild really 'vibes' with Haley's playlist. Given the tumult in Politics and all the protests, it harkens back to the "What's that sound"/For What it's Worth sensibility in Haley's spotify playlist .... Since it hasn't been performed since and the fit is too good, I'm going to call this a dark horse, out of the blue pick for Caley's duet on Haley's album ![]() RE: Day 1, album #3? - Nicicarus - 02-16-2017 (02-15-2017, 06:14 PM)Tusk Wrote:(02-08-2017, 04:19 PM)Miguel Wrote: "New Album Inspiration" THIS song is one of the few collabs I actually think would do well from Caley. Its got a familiar sound, like a classic song; but sounds fresh at the same time. The song picks up from the beginning; gets better as it goes. Hope it makes the album. RE: Day 1, album #3? - Tusk - 02-21-2017 ![]() Quote:grahna RE: Day 1, album #3? - Miguel - 02-21-2017 Seth Presant is an experienced sound engineer/mixer associated with Concord. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/seth-presant-mn0000009327 Grammy Awards: 2005: Winner Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical "Genius Loves Company" by Ray Charles and friends 2005: Winner Album of the Year "Genius Loves Company" by Ray Charles and friends 2011: Nominee Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical "Pink Elephant" by N'dambi Pink Elephant is the fourth album by the Dallas, Texas native N'dambi. Released in 2009 and produced by the legendary Leon Sylvers III, it marks her debut release for the rejuvenated Stax label. BBC Review A soul album that sounds modern yet fulfils all traditional expectations. http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/3g9p/ RE: Day 1, album #3? - Miguel - 02-21-2017 This article from 2010 explains why they're spending so much time at The Village Recorder. Quote:The Village is the base of operations for several producers in residence: Robbie Robertson (the longtime occupant of C, where Sly and the Family Stone cut There’s a Riot Goin’ On), John Mayer, John Alagia, Ken Caillat (who fell in love with and married the studio’s receptionist during the recording of Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk; their daughter Colbie recorded her latest album here), Andrea Morricone (son of Ennio, the legendary Italian film composer) and Ed Cherney (Rose’s husband). The third floor houses the recording operations of Concord Records under chief engineer Seth Presant, who’s overseen sessions with George Benson, Lee Ritenour with Marcus Miller, Curtis Stigers, Robben Ford and Macy Gray. Presant and his staff work with a Digidesign ICON and a variety of outboard gear brought down from Fantasy Studios in Berkeley. "Concord Records acquired Fantasy in late 2004 and the two labels merged to form Concord Music Group. Concord Music Group owned the studios through 2007, at which point the new owners of the Saul Zaentz Media Center, Wareham Property Group, purchased the studios." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasy_Studios Liner notes from Al Jarreau - My Old Friend: Celebrating George Duke: Quote:Seth Presant with the Girl Scout Cookies! Oh, he was also a pretty good engineer. This is our third project together, and every moment hanging out with Seth has been delightful. Talk about a smart high-tech guy, and gentle spirit. Just listen for yourself. RE: Day 1, album #3? - KelseyW. - 02-21-2017 I can't wait to hear What's That Sound! Yeah... I think that's the name. ![]() RE: Day 1, album #3? - dswim2 - 02-22-2017 (02-21-2017, 10:30 PM)KelseyW. Wrote: I can't wait to hear What's That Sound! Yeah... I think that's the name. This needs to be the album title. RE: Day 1, album #3? - Miguel - 02-22-2017 Jimmy Iovine started as an engineer. Excerpts from a 2012 Rolling Stone interview: Quote:Roy took me to L.A. to work with John Lennon and Phil Spector on Rock and Roll. I was Roy's main assistant. I'd just turned 20. I'd been up to Phil's house. I said, "Phil, I'm going to set up the mics. How many musicians?" "Eight." Quote:The legend of those sessions is that everybody was loaded. Quote:You engineered the overdubbing on Walls and Bridges. What was it like to work so close with Lennon? Quote:What did you do? Quote:How did you go right from recording an ex-Beatle to working on Born to Run? Quote:Did engineering for Spector and Lennon prepare you for Springsteen's vision of a wall of sound? Quote: Why? Quote: Springsteen was also a fascinating contradiction: He knew exactly what he wanted on his records yet took forever in the studio to articulate and achieve it. Quote: Couldn't you hear what he was thinking? Quote: Do you remember the day Springsteen finally decided it was done? Quote:When you worked on Born to Run, Damn the Torpedoes and Patti Smith's Easter, could you tell you were making classic albums? ^ Interesting observations there about Springsteen and Petty's third albums. Additional comments: Quote:Turn on KROQ [in Los Angeles]. Every guitar sounds exactly the same, unless it's played by Tom Morello or Jack White. We used to go into the studio and unless the guitar sounded like nothing you'd heard before, we didn't stop. Tom Petty – it was 20 amps, 14 guitars. "Try this one. That one's good for the chorus." These kids, because it's so easy, have lost the energy and innovation that the Sixties and Seventies were about. The Beatles and the Stones, Pink Floyd – they were into sounds. Eddie Kramer was working as an engineer with Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix. That's where I come from. Quote:What do you get out of appearing on American Idol? At best, the show creates momentary stars who barely last the season. And the biggest artists you've worked with – Springsteen, Bono, Eminem – wouldn't even pass an audition. Quote:there's so few people that still covet and listen to albums. I'm not saying the album is dead. But 90 percent of the albums in the world should not be made. There was a time when you earned the right to make one. You had to have a body of songs, a hit single. Now you can't sign anybody for less than that. That's a business thing. Quote:Lady Gaga's got a chance of having the career Elton John had. She's that good a writer. Who she'll become after her second album, I don't know. Adele is creating a body of work. The change is in the way people consume it. Rock has a real problem. All you hear every day is how not cool the record industry is. That's going to have an effect on who gets into music. All you need is a new Bruce Springsteen deciding he's going to work for Apple – or create his own. Look at the intensity and force that went into making Darkness. If Bruce ever had a fucking excuse not to do it, maybe he would have chosen not to. It's the same thing you see when musicians get older. To make an album like [Pink Floyd's] The Wall or any of the great Stones albums – it's painful to go to that dark place. When you have horses and a boat and friends in the South of France, kids who want your attention, it makes you not want to go to that place. You go there because you have to. http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/jimmy-iovine-the-man-with-the-magic-ears-20120412 |