he plugs a couple of pre-amps straight into the soundboard. solid state pre-amps. so instead having having a microphone pointing at a speaker cabinet, he basically plugs his guitar into a distortion pedal, and plugs that into the recording device.
SicKitten81: I didn't do anything to Jason except turn down the stereo when I was trying to sleep after an abortion. so he beat up on me
heavymetalsoldier666: When I was a baby my mother had to special order certain shoes.
and the sound from that neurosis sound is just a sample played through a synth. i'm not sure where the original sound came from.
SicKitten81: I didn't do anything to Jason except turn down the stereo when I was trying to sleep after an abortion. so he beat up on me
heavymetalsoldier666: When I was a baby my mother had to special order certain shoes.
Izzy: do you realize how broad "environmental science" is?
Izzy: it's like going to school for history
Izzy: well, more useful than that
Izzy: but an expert on the civil war won't know jackshit on uhh
Izzy: something that isnt the civil war
i dont know if some bands do it all that way some use DI boxes or direct injenction and that goes right to the mixer so the engineer can make it sound like whatever.
I was also wondering what exactly grind is. What's the difference between death and deathgrind, musically? I know er, Anal Cunt and Cephalic Carnage (off the top of my head here) are considered grind but musically I don't know what sets them apart from other death metal bands, apart from the obvious, of course.
But yeah, what makes a band deathgrind and not just death?
FBS wrote:I was also wondering what exactly grind is. What's the difference between death and deathgrind, musically? I know er, Anal Cunt and Cephalic Carnage (off the top of my head here) are considered grind but musically I don't know what sets them apart from other death metal bands, apart from the obvious, of course.
But yeah, what makes a band deathgrind and not just death?
Death usually has longer songs, 3-5 minutes. Grind usually has 1-3 minute songs.
From what I understand, grindcore is like a mixture of death metal and hardcore punk, so it has a punk feel that usually isn't present in normal death metal. I think a lot of bands that people consider grindcore don't really sound like that.
FBS wrote:I was also wondering what exactly grind is. What's the difference between death and deathgrind, musically? I know er, Anal Cunt and Cephalic Carnage (off the top of my head here) are considered grind but musically I don't know what sets them apart from other death metal bands, apart from the obvious, of course.
But yeah, what makes a band deathgrind and not just death?
Death usually has longer songs, 3-5 minutes. Grind usually has 1-3 minute songs.
time has nothing to do with if it being grindcore or not, but normally grind is way shorter.
Pickled fetus worshipped
Divine Mongoloid
Was fucked in Effigy
Grind is more punk influenced, normally far less pretentious, and generally goes for a raw feel on album whereas death metal is (usually) significantly more technical, quite often very pretentious/obsessed with image, and usually has a clearer production on album.
http://www.burialwithin.com
[quote="goshuaspenis"]if 90% of all women in pubs are fugly, WHY DO YOU THINK THE WHOLE FUCKING NATION IS KNOWN AS ONE MASSIVE ALCOHOLIC KNOWN AS TEXECUTIONER THE ELECTROTESTICULAR[/quote]
Dominate wrote:didn't rebel extravaganza essentially rip off Thorns' tone?
what?
When I hear rebel extravaganza, I'm inclined to think that Satyr was heavily influenced by the cold, mechanistic feel of Thorns. The guitar tones may not be exactly the same, but to my ears the detahched feel is there, especially with the vocals.
Dominate wrote:didn't rebel extravaganza essentially rip off Thorns' tone?
what?
When I hear rebel extravaganza, I'm inclined to think that Satyr was heavily influenced by the cold, mechanistic feel of Thorns. The guitar tones may not be exactly the same, but to my ears the detahched feel is there, especially with the vocals.
Funny you mention that, because Snorre was a sound engineer on that album.
As for the vocals sounding similar, Satyr did the vocals on "Thorns" and it was released on Satyr's label.
he also plays on 'a moment of clarity.' i think he contributed some other riffs as well. however, it's also true that satyr took a lot of inspiration from snorre/thorns at that point in time, which ultimately culminated in them working together.
SicKitten81: I didn't do anything to Jason except turn down the stereo when I was trying to sleep after an abortion. so he beat up on me
heavymetalsoldier666: When I was a baby my mother had to special order certain shoes.