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DoomandGloom
Good stuff..
Yes most of those records... Steve is one in a million in the music biz, incredibly hard working and sets a great mood for making music. Some of his stories are mine actually but that's ok I steal many of his tales as well.Quote
DandelionPowdermanQuote
DoomandGloom
Good stuff..
You worked with him, didn't you, Doom?
Yes they were always friendly, doing demos and didn't ignore one another if they were at the same studios doing different projects. I've seen Foreigner guys hide in the dark from one another. I suspect they were waiting on Charlie in hindsight.Quote
thecitadel
Interesting that during Mick'n'Keith's World War three, Keith still gets invited and goes to Mick's Birthday party - maybe there was some of the phoney war about it?
My studio did not do the mixes but I recall we did some listening after the fact with A&R types to discuss the bass. I dubbed myself a cassette as soon as I could which became a hoot at the after hours biker bar. Metallica was so big then, they had the ultimate power to ruin their own records. Kind of like The Beatles on "Get BacK". Once again a case of following a concept rather than their ears. Whenever I'd go to Yankee Stadium they'd play Metallica and I'd think of this crazy argument I'd witnessed. When it was released no one really noticed the lack of bass because Thompson's mix was that good and he tried in earnest to skirt around the band's request and make a great record. Later on I spent a few days with Lars recording snare drum samples at Hit Factory in the room where the drums for Born in USA was recorded. Not certain if he had any idea what he was doing or I had any idea what I was doing. Rock stars were like that and budgets were huge, an old engineer I knew recorded the Lovin' Spoonful and claimed no one knew what was going on in the band ever. They came in one day and found they had made "Summer in The City" the session before, no one was sure it wasn't elves. Up until around 1985 producers and engineers would file coke expenses under miscellaneous and the record company would see this as the same as a tape expense as long as things were getting done rapidly. Studios subsequently were open and billing 24 hours a day, really the only way a huge facility could make ends meet. Acts like The Grateful Dead or Aerosmith could keep the whole building rockin' but the clean up crew in the morning had their hands full with lunatics.Quote
dcba
Doom were you with Thompson during the Metallica/Justice... debacle?