I understand, I went to that old school in Hyden Ky where the Fabulous Osborne Brothers got a good old mountain boot in the butt and put two of the most perfect instruments together, their great voices
What a breath of fresh air musically these guys are, proves it pays to keep looking, there is a lot of good music out there just waiting to be discovered.
Terrific video. Sure are a lot of terrific bluegrass players there! Harry Stinson is the drummer in the show (longtime percussionist with Marty Stuart).
I had this on tape from airing from just under 20 years ago. This was my first exposure to Nickel Creek. They blew me way then, much like Billy Strings is today.
Probably something having to do with how the video was generated: Several possibilities: 1. This was sourced from DVD/some streaming service or other, and the original source-media was DRM-enrypted. Easiest way to defeat any and all kinds of DRM is to *play the media back* (thus converting it back to analog) - and record *the playback*. Thing about doing this is: you run up against the infamous "generational" thing with analog media - where there is a meaningful distinction between the "original" source media and each "generation" of duplicate (copies of copies of copies etc.) 2. Alternative explanation is that this was originally sourced from videotape (VHS most likely) - and "digitized" by playing the videotape back, pointing a (fairly) high-resolution camera at the screen - recording the result, and then uploading that. Either way, at some point, this resulted in two identical(?) audio tracks offset from one another by a few milliseconds or so. The result is an effect somewhere between phasing/flanging, and a really short duration reverb. 3. Another (plausible) explanation is that the anomalous audio is a *deliberate* decision on the part of the uploader, intended to confuse/defeat RU-vid's automated copyright-violation scans. You could probably achieve pretty much the same result by (for instance) changing the playback speed by (at most) a few percent upward or downward. Just some possibilities.
Okay, I gotta say it: 1. Thanks for uploading this. 2. Having said that, there is something *severely* wrong with the audio. I'm guessing that either the original source-material source material was "digital native", or that you digitized it off of VHS tape (most common analog format). 3. At any rate, you bypassed any DRM (if digital) or "copy protection" (if analog) built into the source material by *playing it back*, and *recording the playback*. 4. Problem with that is: the resultant audio ended up sounding somewhere between "phase shifted" and/or very short duration reverb" - most likely because whatever recording program you used inadvertently recorded *two* audio sources, at fractional delay from one another. Not so much a "complaint", as a technical observation, for future reference.
@@bnjmnlewis1 Several things wrong with that: 1. If it was ambient reverb from the hall, you would only hear it *during the performances* (and not during the sit-down interviews, which obviously took place in a diferent setting). 2. The same weird reverb/flanging effect happsn on the voiceover narration at the beginning of the video - which was *not* done by an announcer at whatever concert-hall where at least some of this was recorded. Now that I think of it, the audio processing might be *deliberate* - and specifically intended to bypass RU-vid's copyright-infringement scans. Just some observations/possibilities.
Thank you so much for sharing with us!!! I love bluegrass music! I was raised on it! My Mom took me to my first outdoor bluegrass festival (if you could call it that) at the Redgate Farm in Maynardville, Tennessee. It was fabulous!!! I love Ralph Stanley, the Osbourne Brothers, and J.D. Crowe!!!! Thank you again for sharing!!!!