Welcome to Patroden Studio, a channel dedicated to all things music production, audio engineering, and film composition. Led by me, Diego, a Music Producer, Audio Professional, and Film Composer, this channel is the ultimate destination for anyone who loves music and wants to learn more about the art of creating it.
Through engaging videos, I will take you on a journey through the world of music, from exploring new tracks to creating original songs and sharing my knowledge on audio and music production. With a focus on breaking down complex concepts into easy-to-understand tutorials, Patroden Studio is the perfect place for aspiring producers, musicians, and composers to learn and grow.
Patroden Studio has something for everyone. Join me on this exciting adventure as I shares my passion for music with the world, one video at a time.
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The song 'Drown' will complete Kim Dracula's vid trilogy, as you pointed out, that brings parts of all 3 of them together. I love watching your channel. I was a sound engineering major way back in the day (in the 80's 😮) and so appreciate your expert insight 😊
The upright bass in the beginning jazz portion is playing the bass line from the last 10-20 seconds of an old school KoRn song called 'Blind' from the 90's 😊
Thanks for the analysis, Carmen, and Queen (I also get Queen-vibes (Bohemian Rapsodie), but always forget to recall). Also, what you did not recall was Mozart's Zauberflöte, aria of the Queen of the Night (juat in case noone has mentioned yet).
@@patroden If you listen to a song, call it boring, and then this song, after minor additions and a good production, enters the top 3 at Eurovision, then production is probably not your strong point.
This song is amazing and the things that were changed for the live performance made it even better. The performance itself was out of this world and Bambie was incredible.
No one, not even the producers who listen to and react to this song, has noticed the subtle growling vocal track throughout the song, especially on the chorus. 😮😊
It's possible that you understand that by now - the part with the ticket with the mirror symbolizes the moment when Nemo realizes that he can be everything he always wanted to be and it's at this point that he broke the code for himself 🔱
This was lost on the musically uneducated and vain audience. Incredible, well written and progressive song ❤ my fave from this years contest by far. 🇬🇧
This wonderful emotive song came in last place - 25th. The hidden ruling families invert everything, imo. They want to suppress our lands, culture and spirit, allegedly.
All the songs that participate in any given year must have been composed in that same year. So the songs in Eurovision are always brand new. In Spain's case, there is a competition on which the representative is chosen, with the song they defend. The system in this festival / competition is alike to the main Eurovision even, with a jury and public voting. So yes, the song is well known. However, I must say that I have never seen in many years the public singing Spain's song in Spanish. This has never happened before for Spain.
You're the first reviewer I've seen of this song (out of lots so far) who mentioned Carmen! I noticed that too. It's only at the very start, but it seems like too much of a coincidence to not be deliberate. 😊
A line from the song from Carmen: "L'amour est enfant de bohême" - Nemo sings "this is my boheme" - there's a clear reference to setting love free of restrictions :)
@@ZeniaLarsen Of course! I didn't make that connection. I was thinking about "La Bohême" the opera - but your analysis makes so much more sense. Thank you!
Am 56 of age and though living in different parts of the world: Europe is the boiling point of cultures. We speak at least one or two other languages, many speak 3-4 other languages. That you don't get in the US or the UK. English is itself just a mix up of Continental European languages, 30% French. Loads of Scandinavian Old Norse 500 years before the Vikings came and a mix of other Wedst-Germanic languages. Note: or else the predominant language on that Isle would still be Celtic.