Apologies for that.. I kinda just uploaded that, left it there for like half a year, and now when I log back on this account I hear that it was off beat 😅
@@metalben005What an imbeciIe exaggeration. You don't have to feel good about yourself by putting Dime down: Dimebag himself said Rex was essential to many of his guitar arrangements.
Dimebag and Rex's arrangements co-existed, AnnabeIIe. What a fiIthy addiction to put one down to praise the other, no one from Pantera did that but Zeek in the comments have to be asinine.
Rexx Brown Hill Harris... every musician who play with him feels good because his job is trustworthy. His rhythm and groove in his bass lines are creative and precise.
@@yeeaahBUDDY thanks for the answer, I learn something today. A friend of mine got 16 track Boss (or Roland) in 2008 and you can't really edit. Copy/paste bars that's all. So I think this kind of recorder back in 1990's could do a lot. Or there were no real evolution beside ram and virtual tracks and built in effect.
@@TSE_WOODYcheck out the brand new Ethos HP basses. Affordable and those darkglass preamps can get in the rough ballpark into what the HAZ preamps did. They come stock with EMGs too
There’s bassists in all genres that noodle just a little too much and sacrifice the bottom end. Geezer Butler and Bootsy Collins come to mind right away. Nobody holds it down like Rex!
@@sv7017 yeah and then there’s the obvious eq, cut low mids a little bit, ampeg SVT 4s seem to have boosted bass even when “flat” so those would have to be “cut” a little bit too, then boost around 4khz and maybe 500-800 hz too
I’m not a huge fan of this song but the bass line during the solo has always made me appreciate it. This and walk are very over rated Pantera songs imo.
Half of the perceived guitar sound on this record is the bass. The guitar on its own just sounds like white noise, whilst the bass is the main note definition.