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Bashlets
So if article about 17 songs is correct so is the part about Ryan Tedder’s involvement. I think this is all speculation until we get an official notice. No doubt an album is coming. It could just be they have 17 tracks to choose from including B sides or whatever. Still hoping for 9 to 10 songs sequenced really good and if they have more put out another album in a year.
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georgelicksQuote
Bashlets
So if article about 17 songs is correct so is the part about Ryan Tedder’s involvement. I think this is all speculation until we get an official notice. No doubt an album is coming. It could just be they have 17 tracks to choose from including B sides or whatever. Still hoping for 9 to 10 songs sequenced really good and if they have more put out another album in a year.
The new album will be released in 20-30 different formats and versions with different bonus tracks on each one and different covers too to cash in with the die hards, it's the only way to sell a good number of physical copies, the fans will buy the same album 20 times to collect all the versions available.
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treaclefingersQuote
georgelicksQuote
Bashlets
So if article about 17 songs is correct so is the part about Ryan Tedder’s involvement. I think this is all speculation until we get an official notice. No doubt an album is coming. It could just be they have 17 tracks to choose from including B sides or whatever. Still hoping for 9 to 10 songs sequenced really good and if they have more put out another album in a year.
The new album will be released in 20-30 different formats and versions with different bonus tracks on each one and different covers too to cash in with the die hards, it's the only way to sell a good number of physical copies, the fans will buy the same album 20 times to collect all the versions available.
I know you're joking...right? Stop trying to freak us out georgelicks!
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georgelicksQuote
treaclefingersQuote
georgelicksQuote
Bashlets
So if article about 17 songs is correct so is the part about Ryan Tedder’s involvement. I think this is all speculation until we get an official notice. No doubt an album is coming. It could just be they have 17 tracks to choose from including B sides or whatever. Still hoping for 9 to 10 songs sequenced really good and if they have more put out another album in a year.
The new album will be released in 20-30 different formats and versions with different bonus tracks on each one and different covers too to cash in with the die hards, it's the only way to sell a good number of physical copies, the fans will buy the same album 20 times to collect all the versions available.
I know you're joking...right? Stop trying to freak us out georgelicks!
Joking? I wish, you'll all find out next year, just see ABBA's, Taylor Swift, Macca's, etc, latest releases to get a picture.
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Hairball
"The best in 50 years..."
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GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
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WorriedAboutYou
I will lap up every single note, chord, riff and line of this new album. Beyond excited for it, it's been way too long. I LOVE latter-day Stones and consider albums like Babylon, Bang and Voodoo amongst their very best. If this is to be their final recorded output I expect it will be an album to treasure.
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GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
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DoxaQuote
GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
A mini album? The people did those funny things, usually even divided into two sides, 35 years ago before CD format took over. You know, the time when the Soviet Union existed, Mandela was jailed, and I was damn young and innocent.
There were also only two options: a vinyl or a cassette. Wasn't that boring, no?
- Doxa
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rbk
Seventeen songs is TOO MANY! You'd think they'd have learned that with Voodoo and A Bigger Bang. 4-5 of the seventeen won't be nearly as good and will drag down the whole effort.
But shouldn't we first hear the album in order to say if there are too many songs or not...
- Doxa
Completely agree with you
Yes - a very good idea...
Disagree...that would take WAY too much time. I say shoot first, ask questions later.
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Big AlQuote
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GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
A mini album? The people did those funny things, usually even divided into two sides, 35 years ago before CD format took over. You know, the time when the Soviet Union existed, Mandela was jailed, and I was damn young and innocent.
There were also only two options: a vinyl or a cassette. Wasn't that boring, no?
- Doxa
I’m not sure I’d classify an album with a running-time of thirty-five minutes as being a ‘mini album’ That’s been a reasonably standard length throughout the time of popular music. I guess it’s a little short if you factor in that LP’S got a little longer in duration during the 70’s. I don’t think we’ll get a tight, concise release, however. It’s been a long time, so undoubtedly, we’ll get something a little excessive, ala, Voodoo Lounge, Bridges to Babylon and A Bigger Bang. I’m not sure if there’s any legitimacy to this ’17 tracks’ rumour, but it wouldn’t surprise me if that’s a somewhat accurate figure.
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DoxaQuote
Big AlQuote
DoxaQuote
GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
A mini album? The people did those funny things, usually even divided into two sides, 35 years ago before CD format took over. You know, the time when the Soviet Union existed, Mandela was jailed, and I was damn young and innocent.
There were also only two options: a vinyl or a cassette. Wasn't that boring, no?
- Doxa
I’m not sure I’d classify an album with a running-time of thirty-five minutes as being a ‘mini album’ That’s been a reasonably standard length throughout the time of popular music. I guess it’s a little short if you factor in that LP’S got a little longer in duration during the 70’s. I don’t think we’ll get a tight, concise release, however. It’s been a long time, so undoubtedly, we’ll get something a little excessive, ala, Voodoo Lounge, Bridges to Babylon and A Bigger Bang. I’m not sure if there’s any legitimacy to this ’17 tracks’ rumour, but it wouldn’t surprise me if that’s a somewhat accurate figure.
I was making fun of that. But the cruel fact is that the concept of album has changed along the years. The old standard was based on physical limits of a vinyl record. That shaped the idea of an artistic wholeness when especially 60s and 70s rock musicians started to see an album as a main vehicle of an artistic expression. It wasn't just a random collection of songs, but an artistic statement of its own. People get used to it, and seeing albums (and the representation of music) in terms of it. Especially we fans of classic rock, since our heroes mastered the art of LP format.
But that is just a custom, based on old and contingent technological limits. The CD offered a new format to get rid of those old formal constraints, and the albums started to be more lengthy and more shapeless by not any longer divided into two different sides. The accessability of an individual track by just pushing one button also changed the habit of listening the albums. As it was easier to skip the lesser tracks, the significance of an album as a whole listening experience lessened. The whole concept of an album changed, and the digital turn, when music lost its physical carrier, offered more possibilities, some even limitless in space. Some artists used that option more than others. (For example, see what happened to live albums: new formats offered much better options to represent whole shows instead of torsos like the vinyl ones back in the day).
For the lovers of old vinyl album concept some of this development has been tragical. It's 'quantity over quality', I hear they say. Could be. But why should a record or an album limit itself only to, say, 35 to 40 minutes? So that not so much filler or crap is released? Well, back in the old days, especially very old days, it wasn't so untypical that big amount of those 35-40 minutes was full of crap, filler stuff. The limitation itself didn't make the music better. In a theory a better criterion could be: 'hey, let just release great music. When it gets crap and filler, let's stop there'. Or 'let's make the album as lengthy as we think our art needs' But how many songs would then qualify: three, seven, twelve, twenty-one? I guess that would depend on the quality of the material and the one to estimate that is the artist him/herself. But would the result last three or twenty or 45 or 180 minutes, that's an open issue.
Similarly, we could ask, why concerts typically last two hours or something like that these days? Shouldn't them be shorter and more compact? Think if the Stones put their energy and concentration into 45 minutes instead of spreading it all over 2 hours, how much better the show would be in quality? Well, they, thankfully, do not, but why they don't is another result of history, based on customs and habits (that had changed quite a lot from their early days). .
I think the idea of an ideal album being based on 35 to 40 minutes is just a reminiscent of the past, of our old customs and habits, resulting of contingent technological poossibilities and constraints. I personally miss those days - as it was the way I learned to view albums - but those days are long gone.
- Doxa
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DoxaQuote
Big AlQuote
DoxaQuote
GasLightStreet
Hopefully someone in the Stones camp has paid attention to The Cult's UNDER THE MIDNIGHT SUN album - 8 songs, 35 minutes: perfection.
A mini album? The people did those funny things, usually even divided into two sides, 35 years ago before CD format took over. You know, the time when the Soviet Union existed, Mandela was jailed, and I was damn young and innocent.
There were also only two options: a vinyl or a cassette. Wasn't that boring, no?
- Doxa
I’m not sure I’d classify an album with a running-time of thirty-five minutes as being a ‘mini album’ That’s been a reasonably standard length throughout the time of popular music. I guess it’s a little short if you factor in that LP’S got a little longer in duration during the 70’s. I don’t think we’ll get a tight, concise release, however. It’s been a long time, so undoubtedly, we’ll get something a little excessive, ala, Voodoo Lounge, Bridges to Babylon and A Bigger Bang. I’m not sure if there’s any legitimacy to this ’17 tracks’ rumour, but it wouldn’t surprise me if that’s a somewhat accurate figure.
I was making fun of that. But the cruel fact is that the concept of album has changed along the years. The old standard was based on physical limits of a vinyl record. That shaped the idea of an artistic wholeness when especially 60s and 70s rock musicians started to see an album as a main vehicle of an artistic expression. It wasn't just a random collection of songs, but an artistic statement of its own. People get used to it, and seeing albums (and the representation of music) in terms of it. Especially we fans of classic rock, since our heroes mastered the art of LP format.
But that is just a custom, based on old and contingent technological limits. The CD offered a new format to get rid of those old formal constraints, and the albums started to be more lengthy and more shapeless by not any longer divided into two different sides. The accessability of an individual track by just pushing one button also changed the habit of listening the albums. As it was easier to skip the lesser tracks, the significance of an album as a whole listening experience lessened. The whole concept of an album changed, and the digital turn, when music lost its physical carrier, offered more possibilities, some even limitless in space. Some artists used that option more than others. (For example, see what happened to live albums: new formats offered much better options to represent whole shows instead of torsos like the vinyl ones back in the day).
For the lovers of old vinyl album concept some of this development has been tragical. It's 'quantity over quality', I hear they say. Could be. But why should a record or an album limit itself only to, say, 35 to 40 minutes? So that not so much filler or crap is released? Well, back in the old days, especially very old days, it wasn't so untypical that big amount of those 35-40 minutes was full of crap, filler stuff. The limitation itself didn't make the music better. In a theory a better criterion could be: 'hey, let just release great music. When it gets crap and filler, let's stop there'. Or 'let's make the album as lengthy as we think our art needs' But how many songs would then qualify: three, seven, twelve, twenty-one? I guess that would depend on the quality of the material and the one to estimate that is the artist him/herself. But would the result last three or twenty or 45 or 180 minutes, that's an open issue.
Similarly, we could ask, why concerts typically last two hours or something like that these days? Shouldn't them be shorter and more compact? Think if the Stones put their energy and concentration into 45 minutes instead of spreading it all over 2 hours, how much better the show would be in quality? Well, they, thankfully, do not, but why they don't is another result of history, based on customs and habits (that had changed quite a lot from their early days). .
I think the idea of an ideal album being based on 35 to 40 minutes is just a reminiscent of the past, of our old customs and habits, resulting of contingent technological poossibilities and constraints. I personally miss those days - as it was the way I learned to view albums - but those days are long gone.
- Doxa
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PaintMonkeyManBlack
is there a release date or rumours yet
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Spud
It's still a bit over-compressed and "loud" in the mastering though.
With better judged mastering, the recording would have revealed much more light and shade with more natural dynamics. [i.e some softer bits between the loud bits]