... or point your speakers at the neighbours wall and turn it up so they can hear you properly.beltrom wrote:Maybe it's the monitoring that's off? I suggest you drill a few holes in the wall to improve, then you could slide a microphone in as well to get recording from both sides.vurt wrote:maybe in summer i will
its a bit nippy out at 3 n 4 am this time of year.
to be honest im surprised theyre up as well.
Are you alone?
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thecontrolcentre thecontrolcentre https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=76240
- KVRAF
- 37262 posts since 27 Jul, 2005 from Scottish Borders
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- KVRAF
- 21348 posts since 26 Jul, 2005 from Gone
Maybe they got up because they're such big fans of your music?vurt wrote:maybe in summer i will
its a bit nippy out at 3 n 4 am this time of year.
to be honest im surprised theyre up as well.
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
- Banned
- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
It was clear that a couple of users would pop up and say that is not so. But my observation is just what I had written...Tricky-Loops wrote:fluffy_little_something wrote:I have found that women tend to be much more tolerant in terms of music, most will listen to a much wider variety of music then most men do.![]()
Obviously you don't know Tricky Loops, I'm listening to everything. Whether I like it, is another question...
(But I hate over 30s parties, they always make me look so old - I cannot stand listening the whole night to the chart hits from the 70ies and 80ies!)
Chart music has seldom been good music, not in the 80's, and even less so today. I prefer being forced to listen to Abba rather than Justin Bieber
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fluffy_little_something fluffy_little_something https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=281847
- Banned
- 12880 posts since 5 Jun, 2012
The sound of trumpet is hard to bear, I like select Herb Alpert, Freddie Hubbard, and Miles Davis tunes, but I can't take them any time. The Mexican stuff sounds horrible to me.
- KVRAF
- 2982 posts since 31 Jan, 2003 from Ghent, Belgium
My significant other (we don't do the husband/wife/rugrats thing) supports me in everything I do, including making music. And the other way around.
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thecontrolcentre thecontrolcentre https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=76240
- KVRAF
- 37262 posts since 27 Jul, 2005 from Scottish Borders
My girlfriends over the years have always been very supportive of my musical outpourings. In fact being a musician is what they liked about me. Most of my friends are musicians too, so there are lots of possibilities for collaboration and jamming, but tbh, after 25 years or so in bands, I'm enjoying working alone these days.
Last edited by thecontrolcentre on Wed Dec 31, 2014 9:49 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Banned
- 10196 posts since 12 Mar, 2012 from the Bavarian Alps to my feet and the globe around my head
Which one? El Chapo de Sinaloa? I love this kind of plastic sounding trumpets! (But I listen to it without drugsjustin3am wrote:I used to work at a commercial studio where we recorded a lot of stuff like that. It was really weird because almost all of the records we made for those bands were funded by drug cartels.Tricky-Loops wrote:...not if you mute your trumpet (I LOVE these muted Mexican trumpets in Ranchera/Norteño!)
I later came to find out that it was one of the ways they would launder money. They would sell drugs in California and pay us cash to produce an album or even just a few songs. Then they would take the CDs down to Mexico and sell the music for a profit. I guess it was less risky than carrying cash across the border.
I'm not saying all of that kind of music is for the benefit of drug smugglers. I know most of it is a combination of traditional music and European music styles that were brought over in the 1800's (including Polka). That said, there is even a modern sub-genre called Narco-corrido which seems like folk-tales of narco gangs and drug smugglers.
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thecontrolcentre thecontrolcentre https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=76240
- KVRAF
- 37262 posts since 27 Jul, 2005 from Scottish Borders
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- KVRist
- 322 posts since 2 Jul, 2012 from Castanet, Aveyron, France
Hi!
Not alone here, my wife loves music too (we have a band, electro/expe/noisy something: http://soundcloud.com/mister-eddy and she has her own compositions also: http://soundcloud.com/sassy-hertz
I love to be able to share that with her, and I support her in her other passions as she supports me in mine.
The dog is the one being less supportive, she does not seem to like noise.
And musica norteña is my B side, I listen to a radio station called "la Z" in the car, pura música norteña, I am fascinated by the mix of tuba, trumpets, hysteria, cheap romantic lyrics, it is FUN!
Have a good day!
Not alone here, my wife loves music too (we have a band, electro/expe/noisy something: http://soundcloud.com/mister-eddy and she has her own compositions also: http://soundcloud.com/sassy-hertz
I love to be able to share that with her, and I support her in her other passions as she supports me in mine.
The dog is the one being less supportive, she does not seem to like noise.
And musica norteña is my B side, I listen to a radio station called "la Z" in the car, pura música norteña, I am fascinated by the mix of tuba, trumpets, hysteria, cheap romantic lyrics, it is FUN!
Have a good day!
- KVRAF
- 13140 posts since 7 May, 2006 from Southern California
I don't remember if we worked with any well known acts. I did learn to appreciate those styles of music a lot more during that time. People I knew at the time (gringosTricky-Loops wrote:Which one? El Chapo de Sinaloa? I love this kind of plastic sounding trumpets! (But I listen to it without drugs)
There is a lot of music that I wouldn't normally be exposed to (because of where I live, my cultural background, etc.), which I have learned to like just from working in the music industry. As a result, I don't find myself griping about music I don't like, as much as finding things to like about music I wouldn't normally listen to.
Sorry for the derail, but I guess it's related to working with others.
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- KVRAF
- 4329 posts since 26 Jun, 2004
Im alone, in my world, and I have loved that for a long time.
I wouldnt know how to incorporate someone elses.. stuff into my weird world...
But, I visit other peoples nearby worlds sometimes, and make sounds with them.
That is very fun, but a different feel, with a different outcome.
When I am alone there are no 'rules', no 'destination'... Its all just on my whim.
But when someone else is involved I feel some kind of "responsibility" to have it make some kind of sense.
If any of you are 'alone' musically, and hating it, just hit someone up for a casual collab.
Not that it is always all peaches and cream.. But I have enjoyed every collab Ive ever participated in, and felt like I got something out of it.
I wouldnt know how to incorporate someone elses.. stuff into my weird world...
But, I visit other peoples nearby worlds sometimes, and make sounds with them.
That is very fun, but a different feel, with a different outcome.
When I am alone there are no 'rules', no 'destination'... Its all just on my whim.
But when someone else is involved I feel some kind of "responsibility" to have it make some kind of sense.
If any of you are 'alone' musically, and hating it, just hit someone up for a casual collab.
Not that it is always all peaches and cream.. But I have enjoyed every collab Ive ever participated in, and felt like I got something out of it.
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- D.H. MOD
- 17941 posts since 21 Jun, 2008
There's a documentary about that that's worth a look: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2504022/justin3am wrote:That said, there is even a modern sub-genre called Narco-corrido which seems like folk-tales of narco gangs and drug smugglers.
No longer a moderator.
- KVRAF
- 13140 posts since 7 May, 2006 from Southern California
Thanks! I'll check it out.D.H. Miltz wrote:There's a documentary about that that's worth a look: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2504022/justin3am wrote:That said, there is even a modern sub-genre called Narco-corrido which seems like folk-tales of narco gangs and drug smugglers.
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- KVRAF
- 42529 posts since 21 Dec, 2005
I can't tell if I'm depressed or need a gram!justin3am wrote:
I used to work at a commercial studio where we recorded a lot of stuff like that. It was really weird because almost all of the records we made for those bands were funded by drug cartels.
I later came to find out that it was one of the ways they would launder money. They would sell drugs in California and pay us cash to produce an album or even just a few songs. Then they would take the CDs down to Mexico and sell the music for a profit. I guess it was less risky than carrying cash across the border.
I'm not saying all of that kind of music is for the benefit of drug smugglers. I know most of it is a combination of traditional music and European music styles that were brought over in the 1800's (including Polka). That said, there is even a modern sub-genre called Narco-corrido which seems like folk-tales of narco gangs and drug smugglers.
- KVRAF
- 8087 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
My wife and I have some overlapping and some non-overlapping tastes. She's introduced me to some good music. She's 6 years younger than I am so her pop preferences are a little different, and the bands we are now embarrassed to admit we were into in our youth are different. Usually if I avoid the harder and weirder stuff she doesn't mind my musical choices, and I don't mind most of hers if it's not the same album 900 times in a row.fluffy_little_something wrote:I would really have a problem with a gf/wife that liked different music than I do. Which is also why age difference is usually a problem, young people just don't listen to the music I grew up with.


