SUPPORT OUR CHANNEL & GET 20% OFF AN AMAZING WATCH!!! We are now financially supported by our relationship with ProTek watches, so please use our special link and discount code to buy your next watch! Link: timeconcepts.net/?ref=LHndE270sS5rJZ Discount Code: MUSICROCKS
It takes courage to attempt a Bohemian Rhapsody cover and extreme skill to deliver it. The artists you featured here had it all. My biggest takeaway is probably Connie Talbot. What a voice! Having said that, I will definetly check out the Martin Miller band. The way Pentatonix used handheld flashlights as special effects was simply adorable. As an amateur ukulelist, I would probably add the version done by Jake Shimabokuru, an ukulelist from Hawai. What he gets out of just four strings is insane. You mentioned the around 200 tracks of Queen's original. It has to be remembered that 24-track tape machines were the state of the art at the time. So they had to record 23 tracks, mix them, copy the mix on the last remaining track - and then start overwriting their 23 original tracks with new stuff. Once you did that, there was no going back behind your first mixing decisions. Brian May describes this process in an interview on Rick Beato's channel.
It really does! It is such a behemoth of a song. thanks for the tip about Jake Shimabokuru, the ukulelist from Hawaii. We'll check it out! It's always fantastic to discover new musicians, especially when they can create such magic with just four strings. The insight into the recording process of Queen's original version is fascinating! Brian May's description on Rick Beato's channel must be a gem. It's incredible to think about the limitations they had with 24-track tape machines and how they had to commit to their mixing decisions!
SUPPORT OUR CHANNEL & GET 20% OFF AN AMAZING WATCH!!!
We are now financially supported by our relationship with ProTek watches, so please use our special link and discount code to buy your next watch!
Link:
timeconcepts.net/?ref=LHndE270sS5rJZ
Discount Code:
MUSICROCKS
It takes courage to attempt a Bohemian Rhapsody cover and extreme skill to deliver it. The artists you featured here had it all.
My biggest takeaway is probably Connie Talbot. What a voice! Having said that, I will definetly check out the Martin Miller band. The way Pentatonix used handheld flashlights as special effects was simply adorable.
As an amateur ukulelist, I would probably add the version done by Jake Shimabokuru, an ukulelist from Hawai. What he gets out of just four strings is insane.
You mentioned the around 200 tracks of Queen's original. It has to be remembered that 24-track tape machines were the state of the art at the time. So they had to record 23 tracks, mix them, copy the mix on the last remaining track - and then start overwriting their 23 original tracks with new stuff. Once you did that, there was no going back behind your first mixing decisions. Brian May describes this process in an interview on Rick Beato's channel.
It really does! It is such a behemoth of a song.
thanks for the tip about Jake Shimabokuru, the ukulelist from Hawaii. We'll check it out! It's always fantastic to discover new musicians, especially when they can create such magic with just four strings.
The insight into the recording process of Queen's original version is fascinating! Brian May's description on Rick Beato's channel must be a gem. It's incredible to think about the limitations they had with 24-track tape machines and how they had to commit to their mixing decisions!