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I read an interview with a producer (wish I could remember who, Quincy Jones I think) who when asked if he wanted to introduce some 'humanization' into his drum machine track, responded that if he wanted it to sound human, he'd have hired a human. :) Wall of Voodoo had one song I remember and can't get out of my head! Mexican Radio. "Rather be in Tijuana eating bar-be-qued iguana." Oh no, there it is again. Tony (off to crank some Zeppelin to get that damn song outta my head) On 9/25/07, Per Boysen <perboysen@gmail.com> wrote: > On 25 sep 2007, at 18.27, Dave Trenkel wrote: > > > I read an interview with Stan Ridgeway of Wall of Voodoo (remember > > them? Great, great band of the '80's) > > Sure! "I don't know how to live... but I sure know how to die". I > wanted to like them in the 80's put choruses like the quoted just > kept me at a distance ;-)) > > > where he commented that "drum machines should sound like > > appliances, not drums." I like that idea. > > Yes. I think it was from magazine interviews etc that I wanted to > like Wall of Voodoo back then. Their musical philosophy attracted my > curiosity. > > He, he... I remember the first drum machines. When I read about drum > machines being manufactured I just couldn't wait until they would > appear in the stores. And when I finally got around to check out a > drum machine I was really put off because it "sounded just like > drums". I had never imagined there were people around that wanted a > machine to sound like a guy bashing drums. Little did I know.... ;-) > I had envisioned drum machines to sound more like banging metal > containers or pneumatic industrial processing etc. > > Greetings from Sweden > > Per Boysen > www.boysen.se (Swedish) > www.looproom.com (international) > > > > > -- -==-=-=- Tony