Right up my street and something I always aspire to include. Some would say this was old fashioned, I say it's what's missing from current tunes I hear. Hoping for a comeback. Long live the Lynnester and all his craftsmanship.
That was just great Bobby (great Bobby...great Bobby), I really enjoyed it (so enjoy-a-ble...) 😁 Thanks Bobby; I liked the original , but your additional BVs improved an already good song. Keep 'em coming, Doc!
I never get tired of these weekly videos. You are fountain of never ending production ideas . Are you writing all this material if so why don’t you have an album out ?
timely! I was just debating on whether or not to use a call-answer in a smutty little song I wrote and am now recording. Wasn't sure the 'science' behind it or if it was just an impulse to try it.... I think I will NOW! Thanks, Dr. Bob!
Hi Dr Bob great vid as always. Can you please tell me the name of this song and is it possible to purchase or acquire the stems you show for this track
Hey thanks! It’s called What Kind of World Would it Be. The artist is called Light Zoo (me) and will be releasing music this year. It’s all very Beatles,ELO,Queen,70s type stuff.
Look, I like the post- Disco-very Lynne production... but (DR.BOB PROMPT:) make the New World Record drum sound... specifically the break fills on Telephone Line. Annually it seems I spend an entire weekend trying to mimic the proper thud; early reflection over head room sound but not Bonham squash, cymbal schmear but with the right kitcymbals balance, whole kit (Flickinger?) coloration, .... complicated by having to use samples, going insane with SSD4, Addictive, Ez Drummer kits, "dry" kits but with printed-in room sound that is colored differently (that can't be negated), right OH sound wrong cymbals, wrong printed-in adsr on the OH that doesn't come out right with compression, .............. I'm in a 70s Jeff Lynne Uncanny Valley... get one aspect right, something else doesn't work... on and on. I'm a guitar player and I just want to get my Jeff Lynne composition yah yahs out of my system, but properly, so I can get on. I can't get out my head. But I need to. Meanwhile, an old Ludwig kit with concert toms, Supraphonic in my living room with a squashed 67 clone nearby would probably be fine? But I don't have a kit. Wife wouldn't appreciate leaving a boom stand in the room with a DO NOT TOUCH!! sign on it, either. ...almost tempted to buy Yet Another dry kit pack, the new Addictive one? I already bought the first one, room sound doesn't squash right, or .. Frakking frak. Ahrrgg.
My understanding about how the 70s ELO drums were done is that since Jeff Lynne had a notorious dislike for artificial reverb, the room mics were super important, and that on at least a few cuts, after the primary drum take was done by Bev Bevan, Lynne would send Bevan back out to the live room and have him double his drum performance; BUT, he would only use the room mics from that pass.
@In_Set Yeah, I know that; and you csn see him doing that on his documentary. But to make it sound right (and not the multi layered snare sound) with samples is not as straightforward.
Right up my street and something I always aspire to include. Some would say this was old fashioned, I say it's what's missing from current tunes I hear. Hoping for a comeback. Long live the Lynnester and all his craftsmanship.
Agreed!!!
Oh, those cascading harmonies! And that chord progression! Another banger, Doc.
Appreciate it!
Great compostition!
Appreciate that! Will be releasing my music this year.
Thanks Doc! Love the vibe of these demos you use in your vids!! Then theres the lesson as well!! Good stuff!!! Thank you for the share!!! 😎🙏🕊️✨👼
Thanks Owl. This is a song that will be on my solo project.
Cool! Can't wait to hear it!!! 😎🙏🕊️✨@@BobbyHuff
Thanks,as always! You're the best! Really appreciate all you do! Jeff Lynne is a God!
Thanks so much! You are very kind.
Song sounds great!
Thank u!
Wow! Simple but effective. Thanks doc. If there was anyone in the music business I could meet it would be Jeff.
I hear you on that.
BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOB!!!!!! Love this Beatles vibe!!! 😁 Thanks for another useful and entertaining video!!!
JAAAAAAAVVV!!! Thanks man!
That was just great Bobby (great Bobby...great Bobby), I really enjoyed it (so enjoy-a-ble...) 😁
Thanks Bobby; I liked the original , but your additional BVs improved an already good song.
Keep 'em coming, Doc!
Thanks Dave!
Great stuff Bob, Jeff Lynne is another great one! Send my regards to Sumner.
Thanks Tim. Sumner says hello. Ha.
Absotively posilutely fantabulous!!
Thank you so much!
I never get tired of these weekly videos. You are fountain of never ending production ideas . Are you writing all this material if so why don’t you have an album out ?
Thanks so much. Yes I did write this and played and sang too. I’ll be releasing my music this year.
great stuff, show us more Jeff Lynne secrets please…!
Thanks! Will do.
timely! I was just debating on whether or not to use a call-answer in a smutty little song I wrote and am now recording. Wasn't sure the 'science' behind it or if it was just an impulse to try it.... I think I will NOW! Thanks, Dr. Bob!
Glad it was helpful!
Great song! Great lesson. Nice job.
Thank you kindly!
Buen truco y fantástica canción.
Saludos desde España!
Gracious!!
Really nice Bobby!
Thank you kindly!
I easily forget that Jeff Lynne is a producer... and not just a certain 70s musician.
He is all the above!
Hi Dr Bob great vid as always. Can you please tell me the name of this song and is it possible to purchase or acquire the stems you show for this track
Hey thanks! It’s called What Kind of World Would it Be. The artist is called Light Zoo (me) and will be releasing music this year. It’s all very Beatles,ELO,Queen,70s type stuff.
Jeff Lynne and the Beach Boys do this really well. That song was nice. Who was the artist?
Thank u! I’m the artist. Will be releasing stuff soon.
Look, I like the post- Disco-very Lynne production... but (DR.BOB PROMPT:) make the New World Record drum sound... specifically the break fills on Telephone Line. Annually it seems I spend an entire weekend trying to mimic the proper thud; early reflection over head room sound but not Bonham squash, cymbal schmear but with the right kitcymbals balance, whole kit (Flickinger?) coloration, .... complicated by having to use samples, going insane with SSD4, Addictive, Ez Drummer kits, "dry" kits but with printed-in room sound that is colored differently (that can't be negated), right OH sound wrong cymbals, wrong printed-in adsr on the OH that doesn't come out right with compression, .............. I'm in a 70s Jeff Lynne Uncanny Valley... get one aspect right, something else doesn't work... on and on.
I'm a guitar player and I just want to get my Jeff Lynne composition yah yahs out of my system, but properly, so I can get on. I can't get out my head. But I need to.
Meanwhile, an old Ludwig kit with concert toms, Supraphonic in my living room with a squashed 67 clone nearby would probably be fine? But I don't have a kit. Wife wouldn't appreciate leaving a boom stand in the room with a DO NOT TOUCH!! sign on it, either.
...almost tempted to buy Yet Another dry kit pack, the new Addictive one? I already bought the first one, room sound doesn't squash right, or
..
Frakking frak.
Ahrrgg.
My understanding about how the 70s ELO drums were done is that since Jeff Lynne had a notorious dislike for artificial reverb, the room mics were super important, and that on at least a few cuts, after the primary drum take was done by Bev Bevan, Lynne would send Bevan back out to the live room and have him double his drum performance; BUT, he would only use the room mics from that pass.
@In_Set Yeah, I know that; and you csn see him doing that on his documentary. But to make it sound right (and not the multi layered snare sound) with samples is not as straightforward.
Try these out!
flatfiv.co/collections/bobby-huff/products/jeff-lynne-snare-samples
@@BobbyHuff I did - but that presents the issue of integrating toms/cymbals/OH sound ....
Try these out.
flatfiv.co/collections/bobby-huff/products/jeff-lynne-snare-samples