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actually i have that book. I basically know they used varispeding and Leslies . I just need to know how to do it digitally.Btw which is th best leslie in a obx . should i get a phaser(got one the mxr) or a chorus? I want the timbers and tones overall I guess. I guess I want a swimmy sound like on "crimson and clover" by tommy james. That may be an even better example. -- On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 20:40:04 Chris Chovit wrote: >Wow! thanks for the info. Sorry, for my ignorance though, but what is an >ADT? > >- Chris > > >>At 09:44 AM 12/15/99 -0800, you wrote: >>>dear list: im looking to recreate the sound of Revolver by the >beatles... >> >>Any specific instrument/part, or just the feel of the album in general? >> >>An excellent resource is Mark Lewisohn's "The Beatles Recording Sessions" >>(Harmony Books, 1988). It's the studio session notes covering everything >>the Beatles ever recorded at Abbey Road from 1962 to 1970, and it goes >into >>minutia about effects & equipment used, the order the overdubs were put >on >>& instrument combinations sharing tracks, alternate takes, anecdotes, mic >>techniques, et cetera. It's a good read even if you're not a Beatles fan >as >>long as you're at all interested in the process of getting music onto >tape >>(or hard disc, as the case may be...) >> >>It won't tell you how to make a PC record varispeed or backwards, and the >>only thing of loop-interest apart from "Tomorrow Never Knows" is some >stuff >>about piecing together snippets from the studio's sound effects library, >>but it's a great look at some innovative use of the rudimentary >>multitracking technology available at the time. >> >>Hint: They were using ADT on almost ALL of Lennon's vocals in 1966... >> >>Tim > > -- Join the most exciting community of women on the web! iVillage.com's FREE membership gets you private email, your own home page, special discounts and sweepstakes, and dozens of problem-solving tools. http://www.ivillage.com/frame/join_email.html