I keep coming back to this, I am so glad the TMMS search made me aware of Divlji Andeli as a band, and getting rough acoustic only demos as part of that lead is a such a good bonus.
I'm very hopeful for this lead. Seems like everything fits to me as far as musicality. The bridge on this demo is amazing, by the way. Here's hoping we get the answers!
@@GuyFizzAnything-xm5kb You do realize that good bands are able to change up their instrumentation / orchestration from song to song, right? Also known as 'making an arrangement'. To me it does sound like this could be made by some of the same people who played on the mysterious song.
Quite funny: The part starting at 0:53.6 goes along fairly well in a way with the part of the Swiss musician Gölä's "Uf u dervo" starting at 2:24.9, for about 14 seconds. Is this so by coincidence or may one has been influenced by the other? Gölä -- Uf u dervo: ruclips.net/video/8ghpo3vepuE/видео.html
As a person whose family has many cassette tapes (and some reel-to-reels) I am going to guess tape decay over time. Tape nerds will be able to explain this in a much better technical way with proper terminology.
Cassette tapes do this over time. I hated cassettes for this reason. The tape is very slow and small so 4 decades of storage does this. Sounds like a Serbian or Bosnian band of this period. Very cool - and could it be the band in the most mysterious song (Like The Wind?).
I don't know if we are getting closer to solving the TMMS or not but we are discovering real bangers! 🎸🎸
I keep coming back to this, I am so glad the TMMS search made me aware of Divlji Andeli as a band, and getting rough acoustic only demos as part of that lead is a such a good bonus.
I'm very hopeful for this lead. Seems like everything fits to me as far as musicality. The bridge on this demo is amazing, by the way. Here's hoping we get the answers!
You do know, that the song uses a more classic rock feel, with organs right?
It does, use synth but the primary is the organ...
@@GuyFizzAnything-xm5kb You do realize that good bands are able to change up their instrumentation / orchestration from song to song, right? Also known as 'making an arrangement'. To me it does sound like this could be made by some of the same people who played on the mysterious song.
@@andrewbarrett1537 Do you know that this could not be them.
Yea. Drumming is bit tighter and less improv than TMMS but those fills are almost the same. Style is very close. This is uncanny. Im almost convinced.
The chorus has this blearing drone in it just like the chorus of TMMS. Style is the same, I don't know. The search might be over.
Cant wait for someone to remaster this banger
ruclips.net/video/ldC400UO9X0/видео.htmlsi=RCKov7UwTn72jSKb tried lol
This is so good! Even if we didn't discover TMMS yet we sure have uncovered a lot of great music!
I love the climactic drum fill at 3:03, it hits like an avalanche. Awesome!
Quite funny: The part starting at 0:53.6 goes along fairly well in a way with the part of the Swiss musician Gölä's "Uf u dervo" starting at 2:24.9, for about 14 seconds. Is this so by coincidence or may one has been influenced by the other?
Gölä -- Uf u dervo:
ruclips.net/video/8ghpo3vepuE/видео.html
fire
Where does this come from?
Why is the volume so wobbly
As a person whose family has many cassette tapes (and some reel-to-reels) I am going to guess tape decay over time. Tape nerds will be able to explain this in a much better technical way with proper terminology.
Cassette tapes do this over time. I hated cassettes for this reason. The tape is very slow and small so 4 decades of storage does this.
Sounds like a Serbian or Bosnian band of this period. Very cool - and could it be the band in the most mysterious song (Like The Wind?).
@@yvesfrancoisritmo i´ve personally only seen it happen with type 2 tapes
man wtf is happening ? You reddit post Deleted again ???
banger
Sounds like "Ty Parr - Aerobic Theme"