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Post by Michael Messer on Dec 7, 2023 13:34:28 GMT
Leland Sklar is one of the world's top and finest players and his advice on dealing with producers is perfect.
Shine On Michael
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Post by Pickers Ditch on Dec 7, 2023 14:12:40 GMT
Perfect!
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Post by obrienp on Dec 9, 2023 15:54:37 GMT
What I love about this is that Warwick actually put this “producer switch” on the signature model. Who said the Germans have no sense of humour?
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Post by Michael Messer on Dec 9, 2023 16:18:02 GMT
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Post by mitchfit on Dec 10, 2023 21:18:15 GMT
may have been easier to list well known bands he didn't record with?
if you think a free agent can't get paid much, famouspeopletoday dot com says he has amassed about 4 million american inflationary notes to date.
doesn't the ground floor of a Ponzi Pyramid hold up the executive suites on top?
upon entering the "full time" workforce in the summer of 1971, gold was $322 an ounce. today it is near $2,000 an ounce. wouldn't my mandatory dollar "Social Security" donation that summer need to be worth about $7 now JUST TO BREAK EVEN today?
[forget any interest accrued over a half century]
what would a producer bypass switch eliminate? below from the Berklee College Of Music [online]
"A music producer, or record producer, assists an artist with their recording project, bringing their vision to fruition and guiding their sound along the way. Being a music producer is in many ways a strange job. What a producer creates can't be seen. What a producer creates is not even an object."
who are the artists that were listed in the credits of "The Traveling Wilburys, volume 1"?
why are so many famous bands digging out the old magnetic tapes to "re-master" their old vinyl albums?
just saying, mitchfit
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Post by mitchfit on Dec 11, 2023 6:17:04 GMT
^^^^ holy misplaced decimal point Batman!!! got to thinking and my memory said gold WAS NOT that high back then. found a better source below: sdbullion.com/gold-prices-1971tried to find original source quoted to no avail, mitchfit
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Post by mitchfit on Dec 12, 2023 23:39:05 GMT
kept on wondering how i could have read it that far wrong, or moved the decimal point. thought my old eyes and laptop sized screen were to blame. bothered me enough that i finally scratched around enough to relocate the source i used again. it's an interactive graph, so perhaps a program glitch. placed cursor on AUG 1971 again, and still get $322,08. this same month is shown as just over $40 an ounce in yesterday address given above @ sdbullion. other sources are near the same. so just to prove that i wasn't highly illucinating at the time: www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chartstill, how could the 8X error (+,-) be explained? just one of those questions mankind has been pondering on for centuries now, mitchfit
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