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Conference napalm::guitar

Title:GUITARnotes - Where Every Note has Emotion
Notice:Discussion of the finer stringed instruments
Moderator:KDX200::COOPER
Created:Thu Aug 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:3280
Total number of notes:61432

2947.0. "GUITARnotes Volume VI - Tape Reviews" by POWDML::BUCKLEY (Venimus, Vidimus, Coastimus) Tue Jul 12 1994 18:29

    
    This note and replies are for reviews of GUITARnotes Volume VI.
    
    B.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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2947.1TECRUS::ROSTThe faithful shall overcomeFri Jul 15 1994 13:0292
    Since I'm one of the few humans to have actuallyheard GN6, I guess I
    can be the first reviewer.  I promise to be gentle  8^)  I'm glad that
    some folks who are mostly read-only types threw in some stuff this time
    out.  Thanks again to all that contributed.
    
       ROST/WAIBLE: Don't Blame Me  
    
    Thank God Fred came over to record this with me because otherwise I
    would have had to sing, play guitar and write lyrics which would have
    sunk the tune for sure.
    
       D.B. WILFRED: Still Got The Blues 
    
    I like this one a lot.  Good recording job, I assume db used his 488. 
    Did Fred play both the bass and the guitar or was that L'Angelo
    Mysterioso?  I see db showed admirable restraint by not breaking into
    laughter in the middle of a blooz tune.
    
       JOHN D'ERRICO: Someone's In the Kitchen/Once in A Lifetime
    
    I guess I should say something nice here because John treated me to
    lunch the other day  8^)   Actually, I kept waiting for some lyrics
    here!  You know, "Dinah, won't you blow", etc.  8^)  
    
       BLUE FLAMES: Blue Smoke
    
    I could tell that Terry Reilly had something to do with this tape
    because the organ is so much louder than the guitar.  Dave Clark sounds
    sweet on this tune, I guess his Rat pedal was broken that day  8^)  
    Nice to hear Rick Calcagni in this setting (more Rick on side two).  
    So where's the tape of "Dreams of Milk and Honey", doods? 
       
       BILL BUCKLEY: Galilee
    
    A nice tune for this style.  Unfortunately reminded me why I always
    disliked the guy who sang for Styx  8^)  Once I got past the vocals, I
    thought the playing was great.  When do we hear something current, Buck?
    
       CLARK CUMINS: All Roads Leave Home
    
    This is a left-field entry that arrived in the mail one day.  Sitting
    somewhere in the territory between Pink Floyd and Neil Young (I knew
    there had to be a connection!), this is a fine tune.  I should mention
    that Clark had more on his submission tape, equally good.
    
       DAVE BOTTOM: The Light/Be My Baby
    
    I always like haring Dave play, this is up to his usual high standard. 
    Same caveat as with Buck's tune about the vocal style not being my cup
    of tea, but no problems with the neck-strangling.  Though the
    distributed copies are three generations away, I had the pleasure of
    hearing the first generation dub from the DAT...wow, I need one of those! 
    
       Side 2:

       STEVE D'ANDREA: There Goes Another Love Song/Bulldawg in Bad Co.
    
    Finally, the Bulldawg barks! The super-low-tech karaoke of the first
    track makes it tough to discern who's on first, but the Bad Co.
    pastiche is great, reminds me of my garage band days, right down to
    the falling down the stairs ending  8^).  This sounds best played at
    130 db in a Camaro  8^)
    
    
       JIM HYNDMAN: Red Hot Blues/Things'll Get Better
    
    What is this fascination that UK residents have with US country music? 
    I dunno, but Jim has the Doc Watson thing down cold in the first tune
    (nice warbles too) and the more electric second offering is nice, too
    although I wish it had words.
    
       HAL LAURENT: Stems and Seeds
    
    Rooooooollllll another one...just like the other one...kaff...kaff...
    I hope you manage to get "Craving Your Love" down on tape in time for
    GN7  8^)
    
       PAUL CUMMINGS: Gabriel's The One/Serious Darkness
    
    I like how Paul likes to take the road less-traveled with these pieces. 
    The second tune in particular is a nice example of how a collective
    improv can blossom into some great music making.  
    
       THE NEXT: Oh Vanna/Feel Like Summer
    
    Hey, it's about time power pop made a comeback.  I'll apologize
    publicly to depriving other noters of hearing the other three tunes the
    Next submitted since there was no room.  Dirk Friedrich is the guy to
    talk to if you want to sign these guys to your label.
    
    
    							Brian
2947.22 Thumbs UpDIVE::DFRIEDRICHFri Jul 15 1994 14:0567
    Here are my impressions. With my Marlboro/Windham commute, gave this
    tape a few listens...
    
    ROST/WAIBLE: Don't Blame Me  
 
    	Butt kickin' blues guitar does me on this one.
    
    D.B. WILFRED: Still Got The Blues 
 
    	Killer tone on that guitar. The Satch would be proud.
    
    JOHN D'ERRICO: Someone's In the Kitchen/Once in A Lifetime
 
    	Real cool synth work, toe-tappin' tunes fer sure. Excellent chops on 
    	Once In A lifetime, turn them up!
       
    BLUE FLAMES: Blue Smoke
 
    	Best blues jam I've heard in many moons. Top shelf instrumentals.
    
    BILL BUCKLEY: Galilee
    
    	One of the more imaginative tunes on GNVI, and I happen to like 
        'Styx'. Also 'Yes'. Cool ending on this tune.
     
    CLARK CUMINS: All Roads Leave Home
    
    	Great song, makes me wanna spark one up. That flute is too
    	cool. And turn up the crunch guitar.  
    
    DAVE BOTTOM: The Light/Be My Baby
 
    	Excellent live recording. Glad I didn't take my wife to this 
        gig, she'd still have me up there dancing.
 
    Side 2:

    STEVE D'ANDREA: There Goes Another Love Song/Bulldawg in Bad Co.
    
    	First one had a nice Allman brothers feel to it, good vocals too.
    	Wondering how Bulldawg would sound if lyrics were penned for it.
    
    JIM HYNDMAN: Red Hot Blues/Things'll Get Better
    
    	Can that boy sing or what!!?? I'm not a big country/blues fan, but
    	had to keep my feet from tappin' the gas pedal on Red Hot Blues.
    
    AL LAURENT: Stems and Seeds
    
    	Now my favorite version. Can't wait for my dog to die tho.

    PAUL CUMMINGS: Gabriel's The One/Serious Darkness
    
    	I play rock cause I can't play jazz, much less Fusion. This entries
    	are most excellent.  
    
    THE NEXT: Oh Vanna/Feel Like Summer
 
    WOW, where did these guys come from?? Why haven't I heard them before??
    Oh Vanna, best tribute song to a pop icon to date. And Feel Like
    Summer, those boys can rocknroll!!! Quit those day jobs now!
    
    O.K., so I had a hand in the last two entries. Scuuussse me.
       
    /Dirk
    
                            
2947.3TAMRC::LAURENTHal Laurent @ COPMon Jul 25 1994 14:5696
Got mine in today's mail and just gave it a listen (there's advantages to
working at home :-).

First off, I don't care what the J-card says, my copy certainly didn't
sound like it was really recorded with Dolby-B.  I had to turn off the
Dolby on my cassette deck when playing it back to keep all the high end
from disappearing.  If your copy sounds muted you might want to try the
same.

ROST/WAIBLE: Don't Blame Me

Is Henry Mancini dead yet?  If not, Brian might get sued for that bass
line. :-)  Seriously, though, very nice playing and singing.  I would
have mixed the bass guitar a bit louder.

D.B. WILFRED: Still Got The Blues

I'm not the world's biggest fan of that highly compressed guitar sound, but
Fred does it very well.  Not to mention nice singing.  Also, being the
curmudgeon that I am, I would have preferred a nice B3 sound instead of
the synth pads (I can't help it, I just don't like synth pads :-).
The synthesized bass sounds very good, though (I assume the bass was
played by db on the keybooards since it wasn't mentioned elsewhere).

JOHN D'ERRICO:  Someone's In The Kitchen/Once In A Lifetime

You can tell these were done by a bass player! :-)  The guitar playing
sounds good, but it's way undermixed and is hard to hear.  Damn, those
Rickenbacker basses sound good!

BLUE FLAMES: Blue Smoke

One of my favorites on the tape!  I'm partial to swing stuff anyway,
but this was very nicely done!  Nice guitar playing, nice guitar tone,
great bass, drums, and organ.  It sounded like a real Hammond/Leslie, too.
If it wasn't, I'd like to know what box produced that sound.  My only
complaint is that drums could be a touch louder.

BILL BUCKLEY: Galilee

Not my cup of tea, genre-wise.  Good guitar playing, but it often is
kind of obscured by the heavily distorted tone that doesn't seem to cut
through the mix very well.  I concur with Brian, I'd like to hear what
Buck's doing nowadays.

CLARK CUMINS: All Roads Leave Home

I might raise Brian one on this one:  I think Pink Floyd picked up
(Genesis era) Peter Gabriel on the way to Neil Young's house. :-)  In
spite of the fact that it has less chords than the Blues Song, I liked it!
If Clark's still around DEC he should post his liner notes.

DAVE BOTTOM: The Light/Be My Baby

Having heard St Amand on GN-V, I was surprised by "The Light"...I never
heard a hard rock band do folk-rock before!  Actually, it started like
folk-rock and then changed into something else I'm not sure how to
describe.  I don't normally care for the style of music that St Amand
plays, but "The Light" was a pleasant exception.  The usual fine guitar
playing by Dave on both songs.

STEVE D'ANDREA: There Goes Another Love Song/Bulldawg In Bad Company

After all the accounts of the famous one-note solo at the blues jam, it
was nice to finally hear Dawg play, although in the first cut it was hard
to tell when it was Dawg and when it was the Outlaws (that *was* the
Outlaws, wasn't it?).  As for "Bulldawg In Bad Company", if it was recorded
live in a basement I want to know how that guy managed to play bass guitar
and keyboard at the same time!

JIM HYNDMAN: Red Hot Blues/Things'll Get Better

Ah, I always like to hear nice acoustic guitar playing! :-)  And nice
bass solo, too!  Not to mention nice dobro!  And I haven't even gotten
to the second song yet!

I kind of agree with Brian on the second tune, it sounds good, but it
cries out for vocal(s).

HAL LAURENT: Seeds and Stems

I'll plead the Fifth Amendment on this one. :-)

PAUL CUMMINGS: Gabriel's The One/Serious Darkness

Paul, did you really do that first one by yourself on a four-track?
I'm impressed!  As for "Serious Darkness", I just might have to get
myself a copy of "Rainforest Rhumboogie"!  I particularly like the feel
that the percussion work gives the piece.

THE NEXT: Oh Vanna/Feel Like Summer

Again, not a genre I'm particularly into, but I found myself kind of
liking "Feel Like Summer" in spite of myself!

2947.4My reviewGOES11::HOUSEHow could I have been so blind?Mon Jul 25 1994 17:07124
    Mine was waiting for me in the Post Office this morning, too!  I'm
    listening to it now (for the second time).
    
    As a general comment, I'd like to say that this tape is consistantly
    good throughout.  One of the best of the series, if not *the* best. 
    You all have a lot to be proud of!  
    
    I'll swipe Hal's song-by-song format...
    
ROST/WAIBLE: Don't Blame Me
    
    Interesting song!  I like the effects on the bass.
    
D.B. WILFRED: Still Got The Blues
    
    This is perfection!  The recording, the playing, I really like
    everything here.  
    
JOHN D'ERRICO:  Someone's In The Kitchen/Once In A Lifetime

    Man, love that thump in the bass!  An interesting mix and some nice
    playing in a tasteful style.  Personally, I think the songs could use
    some vocals, but hey, that's just me.

BLUE FLAMES: Blue Smoke

    Lively performance, cool song!  What more can I say?  I kind of
    expected to hear Robert Plant kickin in like on his Honeydrippers
    project.  Very fun to listen to stuff like this.

BILL BUCKLEY: Galilee

    More of that "progressive" rubbish, yawn...  ;^)
    
    Just kidding.  I liked the song quite a lot.  Even back in those days,
    Bill's style was pretty clearly established.  As always the chops are
    outstanding.  But..lose the dude from Styx that was doing the singing. 
    He's got a good voice and is right on pitch and everything, but man,
    he's a total clone.  Oh yeah, and...gate off that crap at the start!
    HISSSSSS...CRACK..BUZZZZZZZT!!
    
CLARK CUMINS: All Roads Leave Home

    I really liked the style and the song, but it simply SCREAMS to have a
    guitar solo over that intro in my mind!  I always kind of
    wanted/expected to hear that right-on-the-edge-of-feedback sort of
    sound in the solo that was there, but it never really happened. 
    Bummer.  Not a big criticism, I liked what was played.
    
    Oh yeah, the flute's a cool touch, but it should have been recorded
    with a better mic or something, it sounds like it's under a blanket, no
    clarity.  (presuming of course that it was real and not a synth).
    
    Frankly, I don't think it sounds like Pink Floyd that much.  Thank
    goodness, I'm sure burned out on THEM.
    
DAVE BOTTOM: The Light/Be My Baby

    A good recording and performance of material that doesn't really appeal
    to my current tastes that much.  Were I producing this, I'd change the
    reverb/delay on the lead vocal of The Light, it just sounds like too
    much to my ear.  And I'd reduce the chorus depth parameter on the lead
    guitar sound on Be My Baby.  It keeps pulling the guitar line out of
    tune.  
    
    Keep in mind that my personal taste is toward dry, up front sounds and
    uncompressed guitar parts, but overall, the level of effects in these
    two recordings distracts from the songs to my ear.  For an example of a
    recording  that still has the big reverbs without things getting lost
    or sounding like they were recorded in a cave, see db's recording of
    "Still Got the Blues".

STEVE D'ANDREA: There Goes Another Love Song/Bulldawg In Bad Company

    This one is the only one on the tape that I'd say didn't have a great
    mix.  It sounds like it was done by a guitar player...  You know,
    guitar too loud, can't hear the bass at all, um...are those drums back
    there somewhere?
    
JIM HYNDMAN: Red Hot Blues/Things'll Get Better

    Um...wow!
    
    I'd have to say that Jim's submission is probably my favorite on this
    tape.  The clarity of the recording is great and I enjoyed both the
    songs and the performances.
    
    Hard to believe there's actually a Scotsman singing that, what happened
    to your accent, dude?
    
HAL LAURENT: Seeds and Stems

    Hal, you should cut yourself some slack!  What with all the apologies
    and humbleness and all, I guess I wasn't expecting all that much.  What
    I heard was an excellent recording of someone with a pleasant voice and
    considerable taste in the use of the slide.  I really enjoyed this
    tune! (I mean, content aside...it really is a depressing song... :-)) 
    All that work on your studio has clearly paid off.  Again, like Jim's,
    the clarity of this recording really shines through and my ear really
    appreciated it.  Good mic selection works wonders!  Very well done.
                                              
PAUL CUMMINGS: Gabriel's The One/Serious Darkness

    Nice work, a little rambling at times, but I love jams.  The recording
    quality is good and captures things well.  Love that bass sound, Rick!
    
THE NEXT: Oh Vanna/Feel Like Summer
                                                           
    Ah, and just when you thought thought that the new wave movement of the
    early 80s was over, along comes The Next.  Shades of The Knack!  Now, I
    always loved stuff like that, so I got into this.  One small complaint,
    the background vocal on "Oh Vanna" sings it as VannER and it just
    drives me nuts (in addition to making it so that it doesn't match the
    lead vocal).  The energy is contagious on both songs though and I
    enjoyed 'em.  Oh yeah, could you post some liner notes, Dirk?

    So, there you have it.  All in all, I'd say this recording clearly had
    too many notes played on it.  Could we have it again without so many
    notes?  It clutters the ear.
    
    Er...um...yeah.  Good work, folks.  Congrats to all!
    
    Greg
                                       
2947.5my $.02 on GN6 - overall great job!BIGQ::DCLARKI'm Glad(I'm Glad(I'm Glad))Tue Jul 26 1994 16:0675
    Here's my review having listened to this several times over:
    
       ROST/WAIBLE: Don't Blame Me  
    
    Catchy tune. Sounds like Fred W's been working a lot on his fills and
    tone since the days of the DC4. Nice hooks in a Thorogood/John Lee 
    Hooker vein.
        
       D.B. WILFRED: Still Got The Blues 
    
    The word that kept coming to mind to describe Fred's playing on this
    one is immaculate; polished screaming without going overboard and
    getting sloppy. I would also have preferred a more B-3 like patch
    on the keys, but I'm an old fart. I'm not a huge fan of Gary Moore-
    style blues-rock but this does it justice fer sher.
        
       JOHN D'ERRICO: Someone's In the Kitchen/Once in A Lifetime
    
    I kept waiting for some vocals here; sounds like a demo.
        
       BLUE FLAMES: Blue Smoke
    
    Sounds like these guys were having fun that day; maybe they'd better
    spend more time at practice getting tight and less time telling
    flatulence jokes so they can have fun this year too :-)
           
       BILL BUCKLEY: Galilee
    
    Wow, when you say you were influenced by Styx, you're not kidding.
    This could seamlessly fit onto a late-seventies Styx album. Buck
    shows that the playing style was there even way back in '83; how
    long had you been playing at this point? Makes me glad I do music 
    for fun. I also agree with previous comments re: the singer.
        
       CLARK CUMINS: All Roads Leave Home
    
    One of my faves here; a great original tune, heavy on the Floyd and
    Genesis. One of the tunes where I'd like to see the vocals a tad
    louder. Other than that a real nice recording job.
        
       DAVE BOTTOM: The Light/Be My Baby
    
    Nice guitar stuff. I think the vocalist needs to unwind a little bit.
    After all, vocalists are simply marking time in between guitar solos,
    right? :-) Be My Baby sounds like REO Speedwagon/Journey ballad stuff.
        
       Side 2:

       STEVE D'ANDREA: There Goes Another Love Song/Bulldawg in Bad Co.
    
    Dawg plays southern rock/seventies rock to perfection.     
    
       JIM HYNDMAN: Red Hot Blues/Things'll Get Better
    
    Another pair of personal faves off this tape. Great playing, great
    recording; nice Albert Lee stuff delay stuff on the second song. This
    pair would appeal to lots of people, not just pickers.
        
       HAL LAURENT: Stems and Seeds
    
    Another personal favorite; nice vocals, smooth harmonies and slide
    fills, very polished (if somewhat tongue-in-cheek) recording of a 
    cool song. Even though I'm never Down to Stems and Seeds, I can still 
    relate.
        
       PAUL CUMMINGS: Gabriel's The One/Serious Darkness
    
    More Rainforest Rhumboogie type of stuff; maybe a little more 
    unstructured. 
        
       THE NEXT: Oh Vanna/Feel Like Summer
    
    Sounds like the Romantics meet the Ramones meet the Knack. You guys
    should be playing the beach club circuit this summer and get the 
    babes out on the dance floor.
2947.6The Left FielderGRANPA::CCUMMINSSUPER BOWL(1995) RAMS 35 BILLS 3Wed Jul 27 1994 19:2624
    
    
            Yeah, I'm still here. Just got done listening to it today.
       Overall, some really great stuff. It's good to see DEC has hired
       such creative musicians. My first question is to D.B.: What exactly
       did you use to get that KILLER tone???  It was intense!! 
            Anyway, It's great to be thrown in with Floyd/Young/Gabriel.
       I've always been a art/progressive rock fan and I guess it shows
       through. The reason the song only has two chords (one less than
       a blues song), is because the bass player at the time was having 
       a hard time with all my complex chord changes. So I decided to
       write him a simple one. It turned out to be one that most people
       liked the best. I guess there is a lesson in there somewhere, 
       huh???
             Oh, and yeah, that was a real flute. I thought the contrast
       of the flute and the electric guitar was the best part. 
             Hopefully I'll get time for a song bt song review tomorrow.
    
                         Thanks for the tape, Brian!!
    
                               Clark Cummins
    
    
             
2947.7GOES11::HOUSEHow could I have been so blind?Wed Jul 27 1994 19:556
    I liked the flute part quite a lot, Clark, really worked well in the
    song.  I just thought it was a little flat and dark sounding.  A nice
    condensor mic would probably bring out the qualities I think of when I
    think of flutes.
    
    Not a big deal.
2947.8TAMRC::LAURENTHal Laurent @ COPThu Jul 28 1994 11:295
re: .7

From what I've read, flutes are particularly difficult to mic effectively.

-Hal
2947.9Here we go,GRANPA::CCUMMINSSUPER BOWL(1995) RAMS 35 BILLS 3Thu Jul 28 1994 19:1975
    
    ROST/WAIBLE
      Good song with some good guitar work. It sounds like you had
    a good time with it. 
    
    D.B. WILFRED
      As I said previously, I loved the guitar tone. Gary Moore would
    be proud. Very good recording quality,too. Do you know ,"Perisian
    Walkway"??
    
    JOHN D'ERRICO
      I also would of liked to hear some vocals. Great groove on the 1st
    one with the bass & drums(machine?). Guitar too low in the mix.
    
    BLUE FLAMES
      Great playing on this one. Obviously you've done some work on the 
    club scene. 
    
    BILL BUCKLEY
      The hard part must of been getting Dennis DeYoung to sing on it.
    Also heard a little TNT style in there. Really good song though, with
    some fiery lead playing. 
    
    CLARK CUMMINS
      The tape I got is a little bottom end heavy, which would explain the 
    loss of brightness in the flute & guitar. I agree that the lead should
    have pushed to the limit(a friend of mine told me the exact same thing
    a month ago!) a little more, I guess I'll know next time. I can hear
    the soloing over the beginning that was mentioned, but I thought the
    flute was a better set up. Besides, the guitar would get it's turn 
    later.
     
    DAVE BOTTOM
     "The Light" almost sounded like Billy Joel singing. Liked it, it was
    a good pop/rock song. 
     "Be My Baby" was great,one of my faves on the tape. I'm curious at
    the "boys ripped this one off" quote in the intro. To which song was
    he referring?? I recognize something but can't put my finger on it.
    It's a great song anyway.
    
    STEVE D'ANDREA 
     Good playing, lousy tape quality. The singer sounded just like him.
    Ever since my Outlaws tape got a case of the squealeys, I haven't heard
    this in a while. This is good replacement.
    
    JIM HYNDMAN
     "Red hot blues" was just that. Really good country/rockabilly type
    feel. 
     "Things'll get Better".....awesome. That delayed guitar kept it
    moving all the way through.
    
    HAL LAURENT
     Good song. Found myself walking round the house singing the hook.
    Always a good sign for a song.
    
    PAUL CUMMINGS
     Whew!! I actually thought I was listening to a Grateful Dead space
    jam for a minute.(that's a compliment,by the way). I kept waiting 
    for a segue into Sugar Mag. Very experimental, but very creative.
    
    THE NEXT
     Good pop/rock songs. The second one sounded like it could be a 
    Hooters song. The recording sounded a little weird, but cool in
    the same way. Liked it.
    
    
       Thanks and congrats to all,
                          Clark Cummins
    
    
    
    
         P.S     Hey, Hal
                   Sorry 'bout your dog.:')
    
2947.10POWDML::BUCKLEYVenimus, Vidimus, CoastimusMon Aug 01 1994 12:2013
    RE: -1
    
    >BILL BUCKLEY
    >  The hard part must of been getting Dennis DeYoung to sing on it.
    
    Er, am I the ONLY person who doesn't think Bob really sounds like
    Dennis DeYoung from Styx??
    
    
    >Also heard a little TNT style in there. 
    
    Naw, couldn't be ... never listened to TNT in my life!!  
    ;')
2947.11Not "sound like" but "sing like"DREGS::BLICKSTEINLeave it to BeevisMon Aug 01 1994 12:3412
    I don't think he "sounds like" Dennis DeYoung, but I think he "sings
    like" him.  That is, the vocal "style" is similar but the voice sounds
    difference.
    
    I *do* think that he MUST be trying to sound like D.DY.
    
    As you know, I love that tune (Buck and I play that one in Metropolis),
    and I now like the semi-unresolved ending (chordwise), but I can't
    imagine myself getting used to what the singer does at the end,
    particularly the "Yeah!".
    
    Thanks for not making Lance try to cop that.  ;-)
2947.12GOES11::HOUSEHow could I have been so blind?Mon Aug 01 1994 14:425
    Given that the recording of the tune predates TNT's first album by
    about 2-3 years, I'd have to say Buck didn't get much influence from
    Ronni LeTekro on that one.
    
    Greg  
2947.13a historical FYIPOWDML::BUCKLEYVenimus, Vidimus, CoastimusMon Aug 01 1994 15:247
    >Given that the recording of the tune predates TNT's first album by
    >about 2-3 years, I'd have to say Buck didn't get much influence from
    >Ronni LeTekro on that one.
    
    That's true, however, tapes of Ronnie's playing had already been
    "smuggled" into Berklee from Norway, along with the Yngwie 4-track
    home demos from Sweden.
2947.14HOTLNE::LUCHTSwallow your soulMon Aug 01 1994 15:3110
    
    > That's true, however, tapes of Ronnie's playing had already been
    > "smuggled" into Berkley from Norway, along with the Yngwie 4-track
    > home demos from Sweeden.
    
        How'd they sound, especially the Yngwie ones???
    
    
    Kev --
    
2947.15GOES11::HOUSEHow could I have been so blind?Mon Aug 01 1994 18:572
    C'mon, you should know by now that Yngwie's stuff *always* sounded the
    same!!!
2947.16HOTLNE::LUCHTSwallow your soulTue Aug 02 1994 14:146
    
    "People don't realize that I started out playing the
     blues..."
    
    -- Yngwie J. Malmsteen, from a recent guitar rag.
    
2947.17GRANPA::CCUMMINSSUPER BOWL(1995) RAMS 35 BILLS 3Wed Aug 03 1994 16:0011
    
      RE: .10  
         Ummm, Actually I was referring to the singer. You know, that 
    grand opera/hard rock style of belting it out. The singer from TNT
    was first one that came to mind for me. The fact that the song 
    predates them just goes to show that your band was YEARS ahead of
    your time. Regardless, I like the song despite whoever/whatever 
    it already sounds like.
    
                                Clark Cummins
    
2947.18HEDRON::DAVEBanti-EMM! anti-EMM! I hate expanded memory!- DorothyThu Aug 04 1994 17:386
    Actually the rip this one off comment was meant to be "they really rip
    on this one"...I howled when he said it and decided to leave it on the
    tape since it was so gauche! Besides he (the singer) wrote it, we just
    did the arrangement.
    
    dbii
2947.19Better late etc...PAKORA::JHYNDMANThu Sep 15 1994 02:1367
	Thought I'd put down my feelings about this tape while I had
    a spare half-hour...at last !!
	I'd just like to say that I would not have believed that so many
    talented guys work (or did) for Digital until I heard this tape.The
    playing and range of styles was incredible. Hats off to you all.
				
                                				Big Jim.
    ROST/WAIBLE
      Really enjoyed this,good song,great playing and form.The beat change
    in the middle was a refreshing change,too.    

    D.B. WILFRED
      Tone master !! Please send me a bucketful of that sound by return
    mail !!!! Good cover of a good song,loved the vocals too.Smooth keys
    too,DB.
    
    JOHN D'ERRICO
     Loved the groove,and found myself immediately writing melodies in my
    head for both tunes. "Someone's" had a particularly nice,unusual jump
    beat to it. "Once in a lifetime" had me imagining Bryan Ferry singing 
    over it.Wonderful bass playing.

    BLUE FLAMES
      Swinging !!! Reminded me a lot of a Commander Cody live track I had
    on tape,apart from the Hammond sound.I would be dancing right now if I
    wasn't listening to this at my desk !
    
    BILL BUCKLEY
      Excellent track,very 70's sound (of course). I'd really like to hear
    your chops now,Buck,if "Galilee" was typical of your playing back then !
    
    CLARK CUMMINS
      Another track reminiscent of the same period.Quite a dark sounding song 
    with a great combination of sounds. All round good playing.
 
    DAVE BOTTOM
     	Nice feel to "The Light",liked the stops and descending bass lines 
    against the ascending vocals. 
     "Be My Baby" was very slick for a live performance,another great tone
    on the lead guitar,well balanced. Were the audience slowly swaying and
    waving candles in the air,or am I just imagining it??!!
    
    STEVE D'ANDREA 
     Just how I thought the "Dawg" would sound !!! But better than what his
     self-demeaning notes would have you believe. Both well-played tracks,
     very Southern sounding,good tone and plenty waa.
    
    JIM HYNDMAN
     Well....hadn't listened to my own submissions since I mixed them. Both
     had the kind of feel I was after,but tooooo many timing mistakes !
    
    HAL LAURENT
     Good version of Seeds and Stems ! I used to do this song with a band,
     and could never keep a straight face,especially on "My dawg died this
     mornin'"  Nice guitar playing,Hal.Loved the harmonies,too.
         
    PAUL CUMMINGS
     Gabriel's the One:- excellent playing again,one of those pieces of music
     I just drift away with.
     Serious darkness;- aptly named,dude ! Full of foreboding and dark portent.
     A tone poem.

    THE NEXT
     Probably the most refreshing on the tape,very poppy feel,in the nicest
     way. The nearest I could think of to compare these tracks to were XTC .    
     "Feels like summer" reminded me very much of "Making plans for Nigel"