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Author Topic: Is Bruce who sings the falsetto chorus on "Isn't it time"?  (Read 10261 times)
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« Reply #25 on: June 05, 2012, 11:45:57 PM »

Thanks for the explanation. I think I now know what you mean with Jeff's vocoder-part. And I like that part very much. I believe it's done live by Mike and Jeff
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« Reply #26 on: June 06, 2012, 06:26:04 AM »

Pretty sure the vocoder is in Beaches in Mind.

Are you thinking of the totally wacko thing that happens at 1:01-1:04? Yeah, sounds like someone singing (sort of) through a vocoder. When I first heard it it was a true adjust-your-speakers moment. There you are, just ambling along with a song, doing its usual thing, and then all of a sudden something WEIRD happens. On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

Unrelated note: aside from Kraftwerk's work, my favorite use of the vocoder is probably Neil Young's Trans album.
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« Reply #27 on: June 06, 2012, 09:20:25 AM »


[/quote]

On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

It was a kind of joke, John was imitating Tricky, the monster from Open Sesame.

I'm not kidding, that's for real.
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« Reply #28 on: June 06, 2012, 10:23:19 AM »

Who's singing the little vocoder part?  The obviously on purposely processed part?

Jeff sings ( in a very much Carl's way) the vocoder part.

The Bruce's falsetto on this sounds very different to me than another he does all along the album (TWGMTR, The private life...); I've always thought that was Alan who sang the falsetto chorus (as he did on "Be here in the morning").

There isn't a vocoder on this track. Whatever it is you are hearing is not that.
« Last Edit: June 06, 2012, 10:59:39 AM by brother john » Logged

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« Reply #29 on: June 06, 2012, 11:31:10 AM »

Who's singing the little vocoder part?  The obviously on purposely processed part?

Jeff sings ( in a very much Carl's way) the vocoder part.

The Bruce's falsetto on this sounds very different to me than another he does all along the album (TWGMTR, The private life...); I've always thought that was Alan who sang the falsetto chorus (as he did on "Be here in the morning").

There isn't a vocoder on this track. Whatever it is you are hearing is not that.

You're right, it must be an autotune or a melodyne.
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« Reply #30 on: June 06, 2012, 11:56:36 AM »



[/quote]

On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

[/quote]

Doesn't he actually say "Cocaine"?
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« Reply #31 on: June 06, 2012, 12:21:19 PM »

Who's singing the little vocoder part?  The obviously on purposely processed part?

Jeff sings ( in a very much Carl's way) the vocoder part.

The Bruce's falsetto on this sounds very different to me than another he does all along the album (TWGMTR, The private life...); I've always thought that was Alan who sang the falsetto chorus (as he did on "Be here in the morning").

There isn't a vocoder on this track. Whatever it is you are hearing is not that.

You're right, it must be an autotune or a melodyne.

There are no such things as 'an Autotune' or 'a Melodyne'. If you mean pitch correction has been used then of course you're probably right, as many, many producers/mixers/whatever uses it to some extent to polish performances. And I'm not complaining.



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« Reply #32 on: June 06, 2012, 12:47:50 PM »

On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

It was a kind of joke, John was imitating Tricky, the monster from Open Sesame.

I'm not kidding, that's for real.

OK. But.... um, why?  LOL Is there some pun, some connection, I'm just not getting?
« Last Edit: June 06, 2012, 01:28:35 PM by Catbirdman » Logged

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« Reply #33 on: June 06, 2012, 12:59:35 PM »



On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

It was a kind of joke, John was imitating Tricky, the monster from Open Sesame.

I'm not kidding, that's for real.


OK. But.... um, why?  LOL Is there some pun, some connection, I'm just not getting?
[/quote]

I don't think that exist a connection between the meaning of the song and the word, but just now I'm remembering that in "Get it", a Paul Mccartney's song singing in a duo with Carl Perkins included on his 1982's Tug Of War album, Carl says the word "Cookie" too; a strange coincidence indeed.
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« Reply #34 on: June 06, 2012, 02:09:24 PM »



On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

It was a kind of joke, John was imitating Tricky, the monster from Open Sesame.

I'm not kidding, that's for real.


OK. But.... um, why?  LOL Is there some pun, some connection, I'm just not getting?

I don't think that exist a connection between the meaning of the song and the word, but just now I'm remembering that in "Get it", a Paul Mccartney's song singing in a duo with Carl Perkins included on his 1982's Tug Of War album, Carl says the word "Cookie" too; a strange coincidence indeed.
[/quote]
Not as strange as you might think, after all, cookies are most enjoyable for Beatles and humans alike.
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« Reply #35 on: June 06, 2012, 02:28:09 PM »

now I'm remembering that in "Get it", a Paul Mccartney's song singing in a duo with Carl Perkins included on his 1982's Tug Of War album, Carl says the word "Cookie" too; a strange coincidence indeed.


Really ? I don't remember that. Have to check it .
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« Reply #36 on: June 06, 2012, 03:30:58 PM »

Pretty sure the vocoder is in Beaches in Mind.

Are you thinking of the totally wacko thing that happens at 1:01-1:04? Yeah, sounds like someone singing (sort of) through a vocoder. When I first heard it it was a true adjust-your-speakers moment. There you are, just ambling along with a song, doing its usual thing, and then all of a sudden something WEIRD happens. On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

Unrelated note: aside from Kraftwerk's work, my favorite use of the vocoder is probably Neil Young's Trans album.

That's a Talkbox, like Peter Frampton used in "Frampton Comes Alive", I believe.
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« Reply #37 on: June 06, 2012, 08:54:51 PM »

A vocoder manipulates sounds with spoken vowels.

Autotune is a digital apparatus that revises a single note.
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« Reply #38 on: June 07, 2012, 02:03:15 AM »



On a par with the "Cookie!" interjection out of nowhere in John Lennon's song "Hold On." (By the way, Beatles people, WTF is that all about anyway?)

It was a kind of joke, John was imitating Tricky, the monster from Open Sesame.

I'm not kidding, that's for real.
[/quote]

...Or as we know it in the US, Cookie Monster from Sesame Street!  Which was brand new at around the time of Plastic Ono Band -- I guess John would have picked it up when he was off in the US doing the Primal Scream thing.

Ringo does the "Cookies!" bit too in his verse about John in "Early '70".  Guess John must have really had a thing for Sesame Street...

Cheers,
Jon Blum
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« Reply #39 on: June 18, 2012, 11:19:56 AM »

Unrelated note: aside from Kraftwerk's work, my favorite use of the vocoder is probably Neil Young's Trans album.

Trans rocks!

I love Neil's take on Mr. Soul!  EPIC!
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« Reply #40 on: June 23, 2012, 03:48:06 PM »

The one Beach Boys song I can think of with obvious Vocoder is "Here Comes The Night" (disco version).  I think it's Curt Becher doing it.
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« Reply #41 on: June 23, 2012, 03:50:51 PM »

what's up with the shrieking monkeys on Here Comes the Night? was that a common thing to do in disco songs?
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« Reply #42 on: June 23, 2012, 03:58:07 PM »

what's up with the shrieking monkeys on Here Comes the Night? was that a common thing to do in disco songs?

The whistle?  Yeah, some Donna Summer disco song had it, IIRC, as did Steely Dan's "Aja" (which is not a disco song, but was done right in the middle of that era).
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« Reply #43 on: June 23, 2012, 04:01:53 PM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yPJWBo2aN0 5:57 to 6:02

there's a whistle that sounds like that?

EDIT: just listened to Aja, that's a regular whistle, doesn't sound like a screeching monkey like in Here Comes the Night.
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« Reply #44 on: June 23, 2012, 04:09:50 PM »

Who's singing the little vocoder part?  The obviously on purposely processed part?

Jeff sings ( in a very much Carl's way) the vocoder part.

The Bruce's falsetto on this sounds very different to me than another he does all along the album (TWGMTR, The private life...); I've always thought that was Alan who sang the falsetto chorus (as he did on "Be here in the morning").

It's Jeff + Mike in the studio version as well. You can pick out Mike's voicd clearly. Whatever effect they have on their voices, it's the two of them singing an octave appart. Just like they do in the chorus to Shelter.

There isn't a vocoder on this track. Whatever it is you are hearing is not that.
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« Reply #45 on: June 23, 2012, 04:24:55 PM »

The effect on Beaches In Mind is a guitar through a Talk Box. As far as the exact model, there are several made and they all sound close to one another. I have the old-school Heil Talk Box, where you put the surgical tubing in your mouth to form the words, then direct it into a mic. It is not a standalone pedal effect, you need at least two external components, an amp with speaker outputs and a vocal mic, to make it work. A lot of folks bought them without realizing this... Grin  There are ones now from companies like Rocktron or Electro-Harmonix that do not require an amplifier or speaker out from your amp *or* the surgical tubing setup, and you can just run a regular microphone through it.

A vocoder and Auto-Tune are definitely not the same thing. A vocoder and a Sonovox are not the same thing, either.

ELO Sweet Talking Woman is one of the first of that type of Vocoders. Cher's Believe was one of the first major hits with that kind of deliberate overuse of Autotune. The original talk box goes back to steel guitarist Pete Drake, who used it on his "Talking Guitar" records. Then Joe Walsh got the first Heil talk box which was basically a speaker in a paper bag, and that is the one heard on "Rocky Mountain Way". Frampton heard that, loved it, tracked it down, and he got a later one for Frampton Comes Alive.

The Sonovox goes back to "talking guitar" schtick in movies from the 30's, with Alvino Rey doing the talking guitar bit with his steel. Also, radio station jingle companies like PAMS used the Sonovox for their station ID's and jingles, one of which can be heard going "WHOOOPIE" or something like that on the Who Sell Out album.

But the Beaches In Mind sound sounds 100% like a Talk Box; if I'm wrong I'm wrong. Smiley
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« Reply #46 on: June 23, 2012, 04:28:31 PM »

perfect example of a vocoder: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2Bpj8ycvBQ
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« Reply #47 on: June 23, 2012, 04:41:48 PM »

This is a film clip from 1940 with the Sonovox. I love the damned thing! It sounds creepy as hell. The Vocoder in the 70's sounded more robotic, more "modern", but it can be really tough to tell the two apart. And that says a lot about the development of audio technology in the 30's, some of it was amazing.

1940!!!   Look for a Disney record set called "Sparky's Magic Piano", which was a piano through a Sonovox to make it "talk"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kH-krlgo2e8
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« Reply #48 on: June 23, 2012, 04:44:01 PM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yPJWBo2aN0 5:57 to 6:02

there's a whistle that sounds like that?

EDIT: just listened to Aja, that's a regular whistle, doesn't sound like a screeching monkey like in Here Comes the Night.

Been awhile since I listened to HCTN disco style...I remember some kinda whistley sound, but maybe screeching monkey IS a better description! 
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« Reply #49 on: June 24, 2012, 02:12:05 AM »

I guess it's a different piece of technology, that people often confuse for it. I know the vocoder sounds a lot different in that 80's song I posted a few posts up.

A vocoder is quite different from what Cher uses in "believe". A vocoder first analyses one signal, often a voice, and works out how much energy the voice has in various frequency bands. E.g. a 4-band vocoder would see how much energy the voice has in high, high mid, low mid, and bass frequencies. Typically 8 or 16 bands are used for real vocoders.

Then, the vocoder modifies another signal, e.g. commonly a synth sound, changing the same frequency bands to have the same energy as the original voice. E.g. in a 4 band system, the vocoder will modify the high, high mid, low mid, and bass frequency ranges of the synth sound to have the same amount of energy as the voice. This modifies the frequency content of the synth sound and will change it.

With sufficient bands (e.g. 16 bands, like a REALLY REALLY fancy graphic equaliser automatically adjusting itself to follow the voice), as someone sings, the synth sound will be changed in real time following the frequency content of the voice. This is often sufficient that it sounds like the synth sound is speaking/singing the same words as the person singing, but with the basic timbre of the synth sound.

Kraftwerk used vocoders a lot, and Karl Bartos's solo album "Communication" has more vocoder "lead vocals" than real ones. E.g. see the tag line on this song (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uozmVl38VMI).

Having said that, I'm not sure the "Isn't it time" line is done by a vocoder. With modern studio effects, there is often more than one way to kill a cat, but also vocoders have changed, e.g. some are now able to mix in white noise when consonants are detected in the voice input, which can make for more "accurate" voice sounds. Hence it's often non-trivial task to work out what was done how.

Having said that all that audio geekery, can I just say that I think the song is a well-crafted piece of pop songwriting with a very nice melody?
« Last Edit: June 24, 2012, 02:13:16 AM by HeroAndVillain » Logged
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