T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1058.1 | | TOOK::MICHAUD | Jeff Michaud | Sun Jan 17 1988 18:36 | 1 |
| Maby they wanted you to hear it!
|
1058.2 | It's probably intentional | VIDEO::KANOUN | Keith, WA2Q | Mon Jan 18 1988 05:45 | 6 |
| I would bet that the telephone is intentional. Pink Floyd seems
to enjoy playing with people's minds that way, throwing things in
that don't seem to fit, or putting something in the recording that
you don't hear until you've played it 50 times.
-Keith K.
|
1058.5 | MR. MODERATOR | TOOK::MICHAUD | Jeff Michaud | Mon Jan 18 1988 18:02 | 1 |
| .4 seems out of place now that .3 is deleted
|
1058.6 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Mon Jan 18 1988 20:36 | 6 |
| I've one CD that has a doorbell that sounds exactly like mine.
I've yet to not get up and go to the door before realizing its on
the disk.
-j
|
1058.7 | | MEMORY::SLATER | | Tue Jan 19 1988 14:21 | 6 |
| Yes, Pink Floyd does those sort of things. That was one of their
actractivenes in the early years. I think they also had something
to do with people trying to get better systems so they could hear
some of the stuff that was in the "noise."
Les
|
1058.8 | BOC does it too. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Exit left to Funway | Wed Jan 20 1988 08:23 | 2 |
| Blue Oyster Cult also does it occasionally. The telephone ringing
in "Joan Crawford" gets me out of my chair every time.
|
1058.9 | | MEMORY::SLATER | | Wed Jan 20 1988 09:24 | 8 |
| Speaking of telephones, I don't remember the name of the song but
on the much acclaimed "In the Digital Mood" there is a song that
ends in a bunch of "touch tone" sounds. This disc advertises that
all of the songs were performed exactly as they were in the '40s.
Did Glen Miller have access to touch tone phones or was this an
oversight or some sort of humor?
Les
|
1058.10 | 766-5000... | COOKIE::ROLLOW | Do the Right Thing. | Wed Jan 20 1988 09:56 | 2 |
| It's bound to be humor since it comes at the end of "Pennsylvania
6-5000". I think that's the title of the song, but I'm not sure.
|
1058.11 | Well, I suppose if you are in a digital mood | ESD66::SLATER | | Wed Jan 20 1988 14:21 | 7 |
| re -.10
I know it was deliberate. I just don't get the point of the humor.
It is a reminder that that album is not authentic. Did we need that
reminder? I definately think it detracts from the album.
Les
|
1058.12 | I wonder if it would work..... | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Wed Jan 20 1988 22:04 | 7 |
| It could be interesting to try to feed the telephone the tones
to see where it went. I used to know a guy that worked for the phone
company that could whistle his home number into the hand set and never
had to touch a button.
-j
|
1058.13 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Lyra RA 18h 28m 37s D 31d 49m | Wed Jan 20 1988 22:54 | 9 |
| My favorite (not really so extraneous) noise is the barking dog
on one of the cuts from Pink Floyd's MEDDLE. When I first picked
up the album circa 15 years ago, I had my speakers mounted on
the wall on either side of one of the windows. When the dog
started barking, I kept looking out the window to see what was
going on. It took me a while to realize it was coming from the
speakers.
--- jerry
|
1058.14 | zzzzzzzzzzz....HUH?! What time is it??? | TSE::LEFEBVRE | At St. Alfonzo's Pancake Breakfast | Thu Jan 21 1988 06:01 | 5 |
| Everytime I listen to _Dark Side of the Moon_ I always start to
nod off during "On the Run" (I *think* this is the name), soon to
be RUDELY awakened by the alarm clock in "Time".
Mark.
|
1058.15 | | JIM::REHILL | I was so much older then | Thu Jan 21 1988 07:08 | 5 |
| re:13 The Dog barking.
When I first got that album, my dog came running into the steroe
room right the the speaker looking for "the new dog in the house".
|
1058.16 | | MEMORY::SLATER | | Thu Jan 21 1988 07:44 | 6 |
| re -.14
Time, wake up, before you know it ten years will have gone by, oops,
its been fifteen years since that song.
Les
|
1058.17 | You'd better watch out... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Thu Jan 21 1988 08:31 | 4 |
|
I thought the barking dogs were on ANIMALS?
DFW
|
1058.18 | they add to the quality of the music..... | CYBORG::MORRELL | | Thu Jan 21 1988 10:06 | 9 |
|
re: .17 The dogs are there to. Great Stuff! Even the BoC tune is
so real.
For a Scream extreamly erie check out the Rolling Stones song
"dancin with Mr. D". or even Zappa's "the torture never stops".
Charlie.
|
1058.19 | but it ends too soon | MEMORY::SLATER | | Thu Jan 21 1988 14:10 | 14 |
| Since were on the subject of noise and are talking about it adding
to the quality of the music, has anyone heard "Its a Bit of a Pain"
by Faust.
It starts out with a very melodic female vocalist with some melodic
backing and then somebody pulls a mic cord and we get a screeching
highly harmonic 120 Hz buzz. Then the buzz stops and we have the
female vocalist with an upted tempo and a little harder backing.
Then the buzz comes back but it has some musical quality to it.
Then the female voclaist with hard fast tempo rock, with very buzzy
guitar backing her up. Real hard rock, I love it. Its a bit of a
pain.
Les
|
1058.20 | Pink noise/esion/Floyd!! | JGO::FIELD | Switch it on, then try again | Fri Jan 29 1988 07:55 | 15 |
|
I have recently heard 'Wish you were here' on CD. This has been
my favourite Pink Floyd album long since.
At the beginning of the title track you have the AM-radio playing
some tune. Then, before the acoustic guitar really plays up, you
hear the guitarist come in, move the stool, clear his throat, hum
a bit, rub something against the case of the guitar and then really
starts playing.
Although the vinyl version of this album is still in rather good
condition, I really noticed this 'noise' first while listening to
the Compact version.
- Rik -
|
1058.21 | WYWH | ISWISS::SALLOWAY | Suspicion breeds confidence | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:25 | 7 |
| Re .-1
> rub something against his guitar case...
I always thought he was lighting a cigarette!?
-Brian
|
1058.22 | Returning to *real* extraneous noise... | FIZBIN::BINDER | Smile at me, baby. Then duck. | Fri Jan 29 1988 14:56 | 26 |
| This discussion seems to have digressed from extraneous noise to deliberate
sound effects. I'd like to bring it back to noise.
One source of noise is the very fact that a particular disc (AAD, ADD) may
be a transcription of a recording that was made *years* ago - in classical
recordings, with their wide dynamic range, it's especially common. Much of
this noise comes about because the transcription equipment used to remaster
the recording to LP simply couldn't hear the noise by chance or by design,
so the engineers didn't know it was there. A couple of examples:
The Angel/EMI set of Delius music recorded around 1960 by Sir Thomas
Beecham. The quiet opening of the first section of the Florida Suite is
marred by the very clear sound of a tape transport's motor running. The
third section makes up for it - there is a quiet moment when you can hear
the conductor turning the page of his score. Neither of these sounds
appeared on the 1964-vintage LP I replaced with this CD set; they were
buried in hiss. (The original recording was on the Capitol label.)
The Angel/EMI Andre Previn version of Orff's Carmina Burana, recorded in
'76. There are two sections in "Cour D'Amour" that are quiet, both during
soprano solos, in which the rumble of a subway train going under the
building can be heard.
Ignoring tape hiss, anyone else got any good (bad) noisy discs?
- Dick
|