Do you think no new bass and drums were recorded in Holland at all?
Interesting if the intro to Deja-Vu would have completely been added (
new compared to plans in Nassau), because Dave's *The Man of Sorrows intro was a demo. Written, recorded in demo stage,
finished before entering the studio. No drums on Deja-Vu intro, but I wonder if we can hear some bass on it? If yes, and
if Steve added it in Holland, the credits in the booklet and the "bass and drums in Nassau"-line of thought is not correct.
EDIT: there is both drums and bass on the intro of Deja-Vu!
@Zare which intro's and outro's are you talking about? Let's see which are with and which without drums and/or bass.
*Different songs, different era's, but still interesting to compare.
If you take the "bass and drums in Nassau" as gospel then sure, but I'm not sure we should do that. Yet
I still believe intros might've been added/modified in Holland, bass and drums. There's no links for Wasted Years drum track now on YT (weird), but the drum reverb is not there at all times. In intro, the drums are reverb-less. This reverb is not signal processing as much as the natural room sound, that's evident from the record.
Deja Vu's intro might've been done in complete in Holland if you ask me. Check out Harris's sound in the most similar part to Deja Vu's intro - the breakdown of SIASL
Sounds like classic top notch Steve. Now relisten to Deja Vu's intro and tell me do you think it is the exact same bass sound? It sounds more buried in the mix, lacks Harris' signature treble. And the cymbal work is also (in terms of sound and playing) really non impressive.
On top of that, the second guitar, is really unremarkable, wobbly, and strangely locked in the with the bass.
I give 50/50 chance that Deja Vu's intro is just Steve and Dave in the studio, cymbals are copy/paste work.
In general: I don't think Nicko is used enough to playing double bass pedals, to do well enough that way.
Sea of Madness: this is difficult drumming in the verses and hard to sing for Bruce in the chorus. Loneliness did not work in 1986, they could not play it then. I don't see how they could do it now. This is very tough material, for Bruce and Nicko. CSIT will be hard indeed.
Zare, I miss your arguments about why AtG would not work. Synth can be played by Michael Kenney.
I think these five could work:
WY
HCW
SIASL
Deja-Vu
AtG
and these are (unfortunately!) very difficult, possibly cannot be executed well enough:
CSIT
SoM (least difficult for Nicko, of these three)
LOTLDR (most difficult for both, of these three)
Can you enlighten me further (again) on this? I may have forgotten but I'd like to read about it.
Heh I agree with you. The work required to do justice to these songs, today, is more than they're willing to invest, because they have XY songs they'd rather perform (naturally) than digging some old stuff up and then working around the fact that they're not 30 anymore.
However I disagree with the others' opinion that it is the studio magic why these songs do not work live. Lets remind ourselves this is not Pink Floyd. If you listen to this album at normal volume you'll feel the space vibe and how it adds to the music. However if you crank it up, it becomes just "aggressive metal sound", as the effects get drained in the way proper speakers respond to high volume. The bottom end gets quite a punch when speakers start pushing the air out due to enough power in the signal.
ATG would not work because of the soundscape.
Why I don't like any ATG cover (including our own) that much, is the lack of the soundscape and the fact that the original grooves and no cover does, as much as they try to either replicate the tempo or do their own band groove over it. Let me clarify
On the album, the two "triplets" that guitar play after each even verse line (first instance after Bruce says 'Greece'), are strummed chords, played like you'd play funk. The phyrigian dominant bassy guitar TA-da-da-dam that replaces it in the same spot after odd verse lines, are heavy vibrato single notes. If you try to play this on a regular setup it's going to sound way off. Why it works is the GK RL250 sound with chorus enabled. The chorus effect responds dynamically to the signal and it is able to give an extra edge if you play hard (chorus was also used in this manner on Master of Puppets), but it will still glue notes together. Played like this you get a time dynamic in to the powerchord. For specifics anyone can ask me somewhere else - I've used this amp for 12 years now and there's a perfect technical explanation to this. Due to this the guitars in the verses groove nice although it's not actually a groovy tempo.
Since I've been sitting at this post for more than an hour I need to go now - let's just say that ATG suffers not only from synths but also from the way Murray/Smith adapted their guitar playing to accommodate for their new equipment. If you 1-2 through ATG on a regular setup it sounds IMHO like generic power metal because it loses the groove.
But there's one thing - if they'd actually slowed it down from the album tempo in the main part, then their current (as in last 30 years) sound setup would do it justice. The guitars would be able to breathe more.
For the CSiT bit that comes from Rod, doesn't it? He said the band practiced it and it sounded bad. Well I think the most likely culprit is Nicko.