Hp zbook 17” g3. Absolutely a beast of a machine. Also very rare of them has the DreamColor display. I’ll find one, one day. One of my all time favorite laptop
I think I can get better vocal reproduction out of an Audio-Technica BPHS1 or BPHS2 (Dynamic version) with a CL-1 Cloudlifter for about 1/3 of that price.
Where do you use it mobile-ly? The BPHS1 is bulky and heavy. The BPHS2 sits atop your ears for half, not a third of the HMD-27. Neither match its (admittedly inferior to a larger capsule) studio, handheld or DPA lav. Would you please link your demo of the CL-1 with the (cumbersome inline dragging the plugs & jacks) Cloudlifter for everyone to compare?
Many greats faced family tragedy and Hal and Dean were no exception. TWC were used and underpaid never on record jackets. Just like Motown’s Funk Brothers.
What to say? Everything is so devilishly well incorporated into the grand scheme, yet the musicians get to improvise and show their personalities. It's America's art form: Jazz
I spent many hours at Gold Star with Stan Ross as our engineer. What a marvelous guy. He taught me many things about how to get the best sounds out of our group. Those were the days. You never knew who you were going to bump into at Gold Star..
This video does not show Hal Blaine. The drummer it shows toward the end, behind the guitars, is not Hal. It’s the “regular” drummer who gives every indication of being POed that Hal was there, even just this song. Hal Blaine was there in the studio for hundreds, maybe thousands, of hit records. He passed in 2019, but his interviews on YT are priceless. Not just for the retelling of rock/pop history, but evidence of an articulate, thoughtful, classy guy. His memoir is big fun, too.
I've watched a handful of interviews and I just want to say, what a class act Mr Blaine was. If there is anyone who could get away for bragging, it is this man, this legend. I wish I could have seen him play live. God bless you Mr Hal Blaine. I hope you are still playing your ass off somewhere.
I played this chart many many many times and it was always great to do it. Well when I worked in Las Vegas from 1969 to 1974, I played a lot of Bill´s charts with different singers. I remember Edie Adams, I think her her whole book was Bills writing . For me, this was one of the greatest writers ever. With a really great sense of humour! And he played some pretty good tenor saxophone!
Wow, I remember spending many lonely nights with just my little transistor AM radio to comfort me. WLS Chicago was my station, they played this and all the hits of the 60's and 70's.
I love Rodney Bingenheimer {the red haired guy in the background} he was so instrumental in many music careers. Met him and got his autograph years ago... Thanks for helping Bowie and the years of KRoQ. Many great memories in California. Frank is awesome too. Lol
What is this? The low-profile XLR connectors are on the market for years and also pre-built short cables with male and female XLR connectors. Also, this video has such a poor audio quality, shaky video footage, weird camera movement... come on.