Was fortunate enough to visit Abbey Road last year and listen to the echo chamber first hand. Sent hairs on the back of my neck up hearing the familiar reverb from so many of my favourite records. The room itself actually had a massive bump around 150/200hZ to my ears. Amazing video
The mid range 'bump' is actually from 150 to about 350 hz - but this was usually eq'd out quite a lot on the sends or returns. It's a lovely thick, warm reverb quite unlike most digital emulations, which tend to be hard sounding and overly bright. I've learnt a lot about real chambers by copying it's sound on my Lexicon PCM 91 in cascade mode.
I visited in the 70's . I worked for neves and we built studio 3 desk . Met all the staff , the lathe room was amazing . The lathe operator was unique and in demand . He wore a cloak , a large hat and resembled Dr Who . I wonder if any footage exists Inc him . The two maintenance guys , Tom and Jerry I think we're ex BBC . Like two Profs . Lovely guys .
Abbey Road Studios is the very lucky beneficiary of a dream staff employed by the deep pockets of a major label and a nationalized broadcast base. The timing was everything, as Abbey Road’s EMI affiliation guaranteed it steady traffic of the music industry’s very best, who could avail themselves of innovative design to make their artistic dreams come true before anyone had heard such sounds. Kind of a self-sustaining loop, started at the perfect time and in the ideal place. Even as American studios leapt ahead in terms of track counts, and the trend to client engineers, Abbey Road had a sound and had it first in the English-American pop battle of rock and roll. Their lead was brief but meaningful and, for one customer, The Beatles, it was everything. With their solid financial footing, Abbey Road was able to supply musical visionaries with anything their hearts desired, including an unlimited collection of instruments and a book of top players. I’m just old enough to have experienced in my own work the American boom of the 1970s and I can tell you, even then, we envied the magic coming out of Abbey Road.
The history, people and inventions of Abbey Road are part of our shared World heritage of sound. The Waves plug-in is amazing too. I've used it on lots of productions, and it always gives specific tracks a distinctive sonic placement 👍
Definitely. Recording history is super interesting, and Abbey Road might be THE most important recording studio facility ever, historically. I would love to tour it. It'd be a religious experience.
The original 'L' shaped reverb room of studio 2 (used as an air raid shelter during ww2) was dismantled somewhere around 1990. It was situated behind the north wall of the studio, next to the garage where the old location recording van used to be parked. It use to have a much longer reverb time when listening closely to Cliff/Shads records, recorded by Malcolm Addey (today still a engineer/masterer in New York) between July 1958 until 1968.
@@SarcasticTruth77 The first improvement that came to my mind was a moveable backdrop or wall to influence the "room size" and reverb time. Second improvement: Moveable Curtains for high-frequency control. The idea of using an actual room for a room is great. It's just I don't like the room. It is almost as bad as my kitchen cluttered with pyramid wall decorations just to get rid of the... let's call it "ambiance".
If anyone is wondering, the "S.T.E.E.D" idea stands for "Send, Tape, Echo, Echo, Delay." I've been inside it, and the Abbey Road chamber is kind of a mildewy-smelling mini dungeon, but it's one of the coolest rooms I've ever experienced!
Fascinating, I learned a ton! This guy has really done his homework on the fascinating history of this place. Nails it with his comment at 8:15 about using real acoustics.
I like to use figure 8 patterns with the null sides towards the source speakers in my room sometimes, it’s a great way to hear the echo off the walls. I didn’t hear you mention this miking technique but I’m sure you’ve tried it also. Great video!
I had a tour of the facilities back in the 70s. Had tea with Kim Wilde! I remember a few anecdotes of the engineers sometimes running the chamber on the roof at night but forgetting to shut the door!
2 ปีที่แล้ว +2
Thanks for documenting one of the chambers left. It inspired me to use chambers in my mixes more :)
I have been working on my Lexicon PCM 91 in Cascade mode for the past year trying to get as close as possible to the sound of this chamber, as it was in the mid to late '60's. I've used recordings from Syd Barratt's vocal out takes from his solo albums and footage from George Martin's film of the Hollies doing the vocals from On A Carousel. Digital reverb never sounds as rich or dense as the real thing, but I've got pretty damn close!
Just the history of what Abbey Road Studio and genius it has for a pedigree most awesome and amazing. With that said thank for all the hard work on this great video. History will always remember Abbey Road Studio for there shall not ever be another which could match it's awesome glory.
Great look into one of the most beloved studios of the world. BUT: What the flying frik have they done to that vocal? 5:00 It sounds like it was created by a machine. What the hell. It did get better with the chamber though. It really did. But, what the frik.
I own a Keeley Abbey Chamber Reverb pedal and I would love to find out the settings to get the sound of the original room. What position would the Decay knob have? How much Blend (wet/dry)?
The soundproofing false wall , I imagine before that users of the chamber would always be afraid to crank up the speaker volume to reduce adjacent studio's bleedthrough, in case they retaliate by playing louder
Very interesting indeed. Supposedly, time was when certain producers and engineers could identify a studio by listening to a recording and especially the (unique) reverb.
Great info and presentation on the old live chambers. Funny how the demo music is so sterile, synthetic and robotic, contrasting to the totally organic short reverb.
It's great that these iconic rooms are still in working condition, both the studio and the echo chambers. BUT... when Mirek actually talks about how creative the engineers back then were; my thinking is: how much of this can be found with YOU guys today? As in completely putting things upside down, building rooms and equipment from ground up, busting existing rules and whatnot. As opposed to conserving things and never change anything because these tools created the Beatles' music and such. I sense a loss of this "explorer attitude", while the "museum conservationists" kinda took over. I do not mean this in any disrespectful way, it just crossed my mind when he was talking about his colleagues from another decade.
exactly what ive been thinking recently of how the 'explorer attitude' has died in todays audio engineers, who just stick to what exists and don't try building/experimenting with new stuff. A possible reason could be because majority of todays audio engineers don't have degrees in other disciplines of engineering like electronics/mechanical which teach the core technicalities of how all these things were/are built. Its almost like to 'think out of the box', you firstly need to know whats inside the box, thats where the information is lacking in todays sound engineers, most just want to learn mixing/mastering from youtube and earn quick buck. Back then audio engineering used to be a specialisation that was done after a broader base engineering, unlike now where you have diploma and 3 year degree programs that just teach you the cream and what is important to mix a record and make money.them not knowing the fundamentals is why the creativity hasn't developed. Also a general lack of interest in going into the depths and history of the existing 'museum conservations' dies out the idea of creativity.
Interesting, thank you! Inspiring too, I will surely give this concept a go in some real rooms, halls, cathedrals and... aquariums. I can't wait to dial in some submerged reverberations.
If you're sending the dry signal through a speaker, and then recording the reverb, you'll still also be recording the dry signal again (along with the reverb). Obviously there's no way to eliminate the dry signal completely, and just record the reverb. But I was wondering if you encounter any phasing problems when doing this? Especially when pre-delaying the send.
They showed the setup , which has the speaker facing a corner and angled upwards. So, other than the lows, the mics would be directly exposed to the direct sound. And they may be EQ'ing out the lows before sending them in anyway, since they might get quite muddy. I would think think that pre-delaying, if anything, would reduce the issue even more.
I can attest to reamping really taking your sound to the next level. I underestimated that for so long and just used amp simulators to do this; but even if its indeed just in the same room you're in; running the mic again on your speakers.. it can make all the difference. Digital recording nowadays is almost too perfect... you need those imperfections for it to sound alive.
Was in the chamber room talking to one of the engineers a couple of years ago. I asked him about the Waves plugin. He said he prefers to use the VST because it's always available and easier to set up! Go figure
I'm surprised he didn't mention the contribution the Haas effect is having. That to me seems to be 90% of the huge sound the chamber adds. But it is of course in combination with reverb. You wouldn't get this effect with Haas alone.
5:24 I mean, look. If your going to push a single button while being filmed - this is a master class. I honestly don't believe there is any other way of doing it.
Your comment is a shit show to read. Still don't know what your trying to say. If your implying that he's just pushing buttons, thats a mute button he pushes.
Yeah he calls them pipes at 11:06. They are just cylinder things, they diffuse the sound so it bounces round the room more evenly. No speaker inside or anything, just a surface for sound to reflect off.
it is amazing how they can market and sell a shit room with tiles falling off the walls, the reason it is famous is because of the recordings that were made there (it isn't even the same size anymore), there weren't many options back then so they used what you had, you are buying overpriced nostalgia, if you buy this plugin you will not sound like the Beatles. The reverb sounds perfectly fine, but seriously you can get this sound with any decent reverb plugin, it is not magic, it is marketing. I apologize for the rant but I am more than a little annoyed with these plugin companies. They are spending more time and money on marketing rather than innovation, Waves has lost focus and is falling behind
Wasn't that impressed until the guitars. Which makes absolute sense in that the chambers were created in a time of very dominant mid frequency based music. A bit of honk also helped the room bloom.
All you need to do is put a bunch of people that already share your views in a room and then discuss your opinions. The louder you agree with each other, the richer the reverb tail sounds.
That is NOT a Hammond B3 pedalboard of 25 notes. It is an 'AGO' full 32 note. You can stop the vid and count the toe levers. They are not Hammond levers BTW. Probably belongs to some other electronic brand.
@@garysmith8455 I love that you commented on this. I made an assumption and now stand corrected. I have a Hammond rig. I really don't play the pedals so, when moving it around my room (it's on wheels) the beautiful pedals would get propped up in the corner, then a real organ player would come in and ask if we could use the pedals (happened more than once) so I have since fixed the pedal board to the Hammond (it's not a B3 but a 1939 "D" model) and the pedals are also on their own wheels now. It's a much better set up with the pedals and moves around room easily. But I do watch a lot of recording vids and have noticed many times "the pedals" propped against the walls. The Hammond pedals are pretty massive, good of you to notice the 'even more' massive 32 note rig. Cheers. Todd
Yeesh... to be honest, it *DOES* sound quite "bathroom-y", with a very short early reflection and almost no reverb tail to speak of. I'm not sure I could even call it a "pretty" or "pleasing" sound...
This has a very clear tail, sure its short. The Source/Tape/echo/echo/delay (S.T.E.E.D) system was developed to feed back into the chamber, creating a longer tail. It doesn't sound amazing when its turned up to loud, but this is a demonstration so he makes the effect clear. No insult but I think most experienced engineers are aware that shit that doesn't sound so pretty on its own, can be delightful blended in properly.
More of this kind of thing SOS, please? Thank you very much.
It's great that you're mentioning the names of the people who made this stuff happen.
That was cool to hear him just talking in the room and hearing the natural echo/reverb effect in the microphone.
Was fortunate enough to visit Abbey Road last year and listen to the echo chamber first hand. Sent hairs on the back of my neck up hearing the familiar reverb from so many of my favourite records. The room itself actually had a massive bump around 150/200hZ to my ears. Amazing video
The mid range 'bump' is actually from 150 to about 350 hz - but this was usually eq'd out quite a lot on the sends or returns.
It's a lovely thick, warm reverb quite unlike most digital emulations, which tend to be hard sounding and overly bright.
I've learnt a lot about real chambers by copying it's sound on my Lexicon PCM 91 in cascade mode.
I visited in the 70's . I worked for neves and we built studio 3 desk . Met all the staff , the lathe room was amazing . The lathe operator was unique and in demand . He wore a cloak , a large hat and resembled Dr Who . I wonder if any footage exists Inc him . The two maintenance guys , Tom and Jerry I think we're ex BBC . Like two Profs . Lovely guys .
Abbey Road Studios is the very lucky beneficiary of a dream staff employed by the deep pockets of a major label and a nationalized broadcast base. The timing was everything, as Abbey Road’s EMI affiliation guaranteed it steady traffic of the music industry’s very best, who could avail themselves of innovative design to make their artistic dreams come true before anyone had heard such sounds. Kind of a self-sustaining loop, started at the perfect time and in the ideal place.
Even as American studios leapt ahead in terms of track counts, and the trend to client engineers, Abbey Road had a sound and had it first in the English-American pop battle of rock and roll. Their lead was brief but meaningful and, for one customer, The Beatles, it was everything. With their solid financial footing, Abbey Road was able to supply musical visionaries with anything their hearts desired, including an unlimited collection of instruments and a book of top players. I’m just old enough to have experienced in my own work the American boom of the 1970s and I can tell you, even then, we envied the magic coming out of Abbey Road.
I've been trawling YT looking for something informative and it's SOS to the rescue again.
Great video as usual, many thanks. 🤘🤘
The history, people and inventions of Abbey Road are part of our shared World heritage of sound. The Waves plug-in is amazing too. I've used it on lots of productions, and it always gives specific tracks a distinctive sonic placement 👍
Definitely. Recording history is super interesting, and Abbey Road might be THE most important recording studio facility ever, historically. I would love to tour it. It'd be a religious experience.
The original 'L' shaped reverb room of studio 2 (used as an air raid shelter during ww2) was dismantled somewhere around 1990.
It was situated behind the north wall of the studio, next to the garage where the old location recording van used to be parked.
It use to have a much longer reverb time when listening closely to Cliff/Shads records, recorded by Malcolm Addey (today still a engineer/masterer in New York) between July 1958 until 1968.
I'm blown away how that small room made the snare sound so massive 9:00
Wonderful to have an experienced professional talk and demonstrate in this clear and casual manner. Great get!
Genius. Works great for me on my Yamaha RX15 drums, but essentially, it has only one preset: "Bad sounding room". Very interesting video, though.
@@SarcasticTruth77 The first improvement that came to my mind was a moveable backdrop or wall to influence the "room size" and reverb time. Second improvement: Moveable Curtains for high-frequency control. The idea of using an actual room for a room is great. It's just I don't like the room. It is almost as bad as my kitchen cluttered with pyramid wall decorations just to get rid of the... let's call it "ambiance".
If anyone is wondering, the "S.T.E.E.D" idea stands for "Send, Tape, Echo, Echo, Delay." I've been inside it, and the Abbey Road chamber is kind of a mildewy-smelling mini dungeon, but it's one of the coolest rooms I've ever experienced!
Fascinating, I learned a ton! This guy has really done his homework on the fascinating history of this place. Nails it with his comment at 8:15 about using real acoustics.
I like to use figure 8 patterns with the null sides towards the source speakers in my room sometimes, it’s a great way to hear the echo off the walls. I didn’t hear you mention this miking technique but I’m sure you’ve tried it also. Great video!
great video. wow to that Neve desk too!
I had a tour of the facilities back in the 70s. Had tea with Kim Wilde! I remember a few anecdotes of the engineers sometimes running the chamber on the roof at night but forgetting to shut the door!
Thanks for documenting one of the chambers left. It inspired me to use chambers in my mixes more :)
I have been working on my Lexicon PCM 91 in Cascade mode for the past year trying to get as close as possible to the sound of this chamber, as it was in the mid to late '60's.
I've used recordings from Syd Barratt's vocal out takes from his solo albums and footage from George Martin's film of the Hollies doing the vocals from On A Carousel.
Digital reverb never sounds as rich or dense as the real thing, but I've got pretty damn close!
So now I know where those old Cliff Richard records got their great vocal reverb from :)
Sounds fantastic. Great song and mix!
you guys are nailing these vids. it seems you are really trying to find unique presentations. thanks
Fantastic insightful video, really well made and presented
Just the history of what Abbey Road Studio and genius it has for a pedigree most awesome and amazing. With that said thank for all the hard work on this great video. History will always remember Abbey Road Studio for there shall not ever be another which could match it's awesome glory.
It sounds amazing on the high registers of the synth!
It seems to introduce a hum though
Great video and educational content! Loved the history. That console was remarkable too.
Great video... lovely to hear some actual examples 👍
8:30 gate it a bit and then brickwall compress it. Boom. Instant 80s
I have the plugin version of this, but seeing this video actually helped me understand it
Interesting stuff !! I’ve often wondered about how reverb techniques were achieved in the past .
That was fasinating~!
Great look into one of the most beloved studios of the world.
BUT: What the flying frik have they done to that vocal? 5:00 It sounds like it was created by a machine. What the hell. It did get better with the chamber though. It really did. But, what the frik.
Re: vocals-
It genuinely sounds like a test-to-speech synthesizer running through Melodyne or something.
If walls have memory (stone tape theory) and can absorb energy imagine the sounds held within those walls and ceiling 😳
I own a Keeley Abbey Chamber Reverb pedal and I would love to find out the settings to get the sound of the original room. What position would the Decay knob have? How much Blend (wet/dry)?
what the name of the artists of the demo song ?
Great video! Just curious what the song used is? Really liked it :-)
Super interresting!
The soundproofing false wall , I imagine before that users of the chamber would always be afraid to crank up the speaker volume to reduce adjacent studio's bleedthrough, in case they retaliate by playing louder
Brilliant, mates!
Very interesting indeed. Supposedly, time was when certain producers and engineers could identify a studio by listening to a recording and especially the (unique) reverb.
6:00 Studio 2 proper. 10:40 Geoff Emerick revived disused chamber for Beatles Anthology.
Excellent Video.
Great info and presentation on the old live chambers. Funny how the demo music is so sterile, synthetic and robotic, contrasting to the totally organic short reverb.
It's great that these iconic rooms are still in working condition, both the studio and the echo chambers. BUT... when Mirek actually talks about how creative the engineers back then were; my thinking is: how much of this can be found with YOU guys today? As in completely putting things upside down, building rooms and equipment from ground up, busting existing rules and whatnot. As opposed to conserving things and never change anything because these tools created the Beatles' music and such. I sense a loss of this "explorer attitude", while the "museum conservationists" kinda took over.
I do not mean this in any disrespectful way, it just crossed my mind when he was talking about his colleagues from another decade.
exactly what ive been thinking recently of how the 'explorer attitude' has died in todays audio engineers, who just stick to what exists and don't try building/experimenting with new stuff. A possible reason could be because majority of todays audio engineers don't have degrees in other disciplines of engineering like electronics/mechanical which teach the core technicalities of how all these things were/are built. Its almost like to 'think out of the box', you firstly need to know whats inside the box, thats where the information is lacking in todays sound engineers, most just want to learn mixing/mastering from youtube and earn quick buck. Back then audio engineering used to be a specialisation that was done after a broader base engineering, unlike now where you have diploma and 3 year degree programs that just teach you the cream and what is important to mix a record and make money.them not knowing the fundamentals is why the creativity hasn't developed. Also a general lack of interest in going into the depths and history of the existing 'museum conservations' dies out the idea of creativity.
Interesting, thank you! Inspiring too, I will surely give this concept a go in some real rooms, halls, cathedrals and... aquariums. I can't wait to dial in some submerged reverberations.
Excellent
If you're sending the dry signal through a speaker, and then recording the reverb, you'll still also be recording the dry signal again (along with the reverb). Obviously there's no way to eliminate the dry signal completely, and just record the reverb. But I was wondering if you encounter any phasing problems when doing this? Especially when pre-delaying the send.
They showed the setup , which has the speaker facing a corner and angled upwards. So, other than the lows, the mics would be directly exposed to the direct sound. And they may be EQ'ing out the lows before sending them in anyway, since they might get quite muddy. I would think think that pre-delaying, if anything, would reduce the issue even more.
@@deanroddey2881 Yeah true, you're right. And it's probably negligible anyway. I overthink things sometimes (I think - maybe - or do I?).
Is that vocal sample from a real song? Love it!
Good insight
Thanks! 👍
Who was that last number? That shit was catchy!!
I can attest to reamping really taking your sound to the next level. I underestimated that for so long and just used amp simulators to do this; but even if its indeed just in the same room you're in; running the mic again on your speakers.. it can make all the difference. Digital recording nowadays is almost too perfect... you need those imperfections for it to sound alive.
Was in the chamber room talking to one of the engineers a couple of years ago. I asked him about the Waves plugin. He said he prefers to use the VST because it's always available and easier to set up! Go figure
Necessity is the mother of invention. Remove the need and the VST is possibly more appealing.
Cheers
Aaah it looks like the pool rooms in there!
Whats that song at the end?
It's a very bathroomy sound, which I don't like on vocal, but it really does something great to the synths and good on guitar too.
Hey, its just a rectangular room with some columns in it!
Uauuuu, It’s sounds like a god’s voice to us!!
that drum on 5:30 tho, feels like it is punching my face
What console are we seeing here?
I'm surprised he didn't mention the contribution the Haas effect is having. That to me seems to be 90% of the huge sound the chamber adds. But it is of course in combination with reverb. You wouldn't get this effect with Haas alone.
What's the song at the end?
5:24 I mean, look. If your going to push a single button while being filmed - this is a master class. I honestly don't believe there is any other way of doing it.
One of the best skills behind the desk is to look like you're really doing something
Your comment is a shit show to read. Still don't know what your trying to say. If your implying that he's just pushing buttons, thats a mute button he pushes.
What are those big pillars? Anyone know? Are they pipes with 15"/18" drivers in or just something to "shape" the echo?
Yeah he calls them pipes at 11:06. They are just cylinder things, they diffuse the sound so it bounces round the room more evenly. No speaker inside or anything, just a surface for sound to reflect off.
@@callumhall967 Thanks.
Thnks
Surprised it’s so small. You can always shorten time with mic placement but you can’t lengthen it, right?
Does anyone know the name of the song?
Who is the recording artist?
Honestly, when he was cutting the vocal reverb on/off at the end, I thought it sounded better off.
Probably turned up a little high for demonstration purposes
Back when audio engineers were actually engineers - that is electronics geeks.
Often when she said it didn't matter its the way it grows made me wondered why she didn't bother
it is amazing how they can market and sell a shit room with tiles falling off the walls, the reason it is famous is because of the recordings that were made there (it isn't even the same size anymore), there weren't many options back then so they used what you had, you are buying overpriced nostalgia, if you buy this plugin you will not sound like the Beatles. The reverb sounds perfectly fine, but seriously you can get this sound with any decent reverb plugin, it is not magic, it is marketing. I apologize for the rant but I am more than a little annoyed with these plugin companies. They are spending more time and money on marketing rather than innovation, Waves has lost focus and is falling behind
Waves golden years are long gone. Their last great products were the Rennaissance plugins and that was nearly 20 years ago.
Boss I constantly use this plug in ON MODERN POP MIXES and only paid like 10$ for it. Quit bitching Jesus.
Wasn't that impressed until the guitars. Which makes absolute sense in that the chambers were created in a time of very dominant mid frequency based music. A bit of honk also helped the room bloom.
this reverb remind me to rush song
For a small moment I thought its was Bono who presents this video...
Calling it now, Universal Audio's new reverb plugin will be the abbey road chamber.
I sure as hell hope so!
Isn’t there one from waves?
@@Rgdonaire_07 Yes, Waves has done one already.
@@Rgdonaire_07 Yeah but waves is dog shit my friend.
@@producermathew Compared to UAD, definitely. But sometimes you got low pockets and gotta grab the budget (waves) version of stuff.
You know, there are actual people out there who believe the singers were actually recording IN THE ECHO CHAMBER!! 😀
✨✨👏👏
Then you get Joe Meek who LITERALLY recorded in a bathroom.
The snare through the chamber sounds like a toilet seat being slammed shut. :D
Why do I love this reverb chamber on the Beatles records so much, but not on this demonstration ?
Possibly because the music and singing are awful in this video.
"Bog Echo"
All you need to do is put a bunch of people that already share your views in a room and then discuss your opinions. The louder you agree with each other, the richer the reverb tail sounds.
01:54 .there is a indian guy in the frame . far right
Ha ha.. Love this " so where should we store these useless bass pedals off the B3?". "Oh, just toss them in the echo room."
That is NOT a Hammond B3 pedalboard of 25 notes. It is an 'AGO' full 32 note. You can stop the vid and count the toe levers. They are not Hammond levers BTW. Probably belongs to some other electronic brand.
@@garysmith8455 I love that you commented on this. I made an assumption and now stand corrected. I have a Hammond rig. I really don't play the pedals so, when moving it around my room (it's on wheels) the beautiful pedals would get propped up in the corner, then a real organ player would come in and ask if we could use the pedals (happened more than once) so I have since fixed the pedal board to the Hammond (it's not a B3 but a 1939 "D" model) and the pedals are also on their own wheels now. It's a much better set up with the pedals and moves around room easily. But I do watch a lot of recording vids and have noticed many times "the pedals" propped against the walls. The Hammond pedals are pretty massive, good of you to notice the 'even more' massive 32 note rig. Cheers. Todd
Yeesh... to be honest, it *DOES* sound quite "bathroom-y", with a very short early reflection and almost no reverb tail to speak of. I'm not sure I could even call it a "pretty" or "pleasing" sound...
This has a very clear tail, sure its short. The Source/Tape/echo/echo/delay (S.T.E.E.D) system was developed to feed back into the chamber, creating a longer tail. It doesn't sound amazing when its turned up to loud, but this is a demonstration so he makes the effect clear. No insult but I think most experienced engineers are aware that shit that doesn't sound so pretty on its own, can be delightful blended in properly.
Super interesting, but that was a really bad choice for a vocal track to demo that type of verb.
interesting, sounds like crap to my ears until he drops the vocal into the mix.
Wow, it doesn't sound like the 60's echo chamber AT ALL!!! It's too short, boxy, not very good sounding. They better rebulid it to the original specs.
Is he deaf? That hum is annoying, soo loud!! :)
..or maybe that is a part of the magic sound... 😏
@@mcadder nah haha
Hum, you mean tone of the reverb? Either way, you ask a question like a douche. Grow up.
Sounds good on everything but the singer. Too metallic. He sounds better to me dry.
sounds gash tbh
The Beatles were just another crappy bubblegum-pop group.