On Sat, 2006-05-27 at 17:14 +0700, Patrick Shirkey wrote: > John Anderson wrote: > > Patrick Shirkey wrote: > > > >> I like thirty. It has a nice airy flow and clean sound. It reminds me > >> of a soundtrack the Coen Brothers would use. > > > > Thanks. Now all I have to do is somehow convince the Coen Brothers to > > actually use it :-) > > > > If you don't mind me asking - what did you dislike about firelightless? > > Be honest now... > > > > Hi John, > > Well you asked for it... :) > > -- > > - The violin comes in very sharp on the very first second of the song. > - Then there are certain pitches that the singer sounds quite flat on. > Particularly the highest notes. Otherwise her voice is well fitted to > the over feeling of the song. > - There are a couple of points where the timing is lost in the center of > the track. > John, Since you're asking for painfully honest opinions I'll throw mine in here as well ;-) I agree with Patrick on the vocals. It seems to me that the singer is afraid of her own voice. I have recorded some of my son's friends bands and almost without exception the "singers" think that falsetto is their normal singing voice. I usually have to run all of the rest of the band out and spend a few hours getting them to loosen up and really sing. It sounds to me like the singer in Firelightless has a decent voice, she's just got to go ahead and belt it out. If you're striving for that soft vocal sound you can do it with mic placement and/or volume and effects instead of having her sing falsetto. I don't feel that you lost the timing in the center, it just gets a bit more understated. You're still on tempo. Other than the vocals I think it's a great song. I like everything else about it. -- Jan 'Evil Twin' Depner The Fuzzy Dice http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/fuzzy.html "As we enjoy great advantages from the invention of others, we should be glad of an opportunity to serve others by any invention of ours, and this we should do freely and generously." Benjamin Franklin, on declining patents offered by the governor of Pennsylvania for his "Pennsylvania Fireplace", c. 1744