5:43, watch the delay on the cymbal hand. You can't do that without being in the pocket. Jimmy is at the top his his game. He is a legend. For my money, Jimmy D'anda is George's best drummer ever.
@@joerod0- It's true that sometimes audio doesn't pick up correctly on certain sides of a club or stage, so perhaps he was just standing in the 'wrong' position. Some mixing techniques still also go by traditional methods, such as how Van Halen recorded music, Van Halen II for example, they put the drums on the right and the guitars on the left or vice versa. Sometimes they also do the same thing live, so maybe that's how the mixing engineer is doing things here.. no idea. I guess that's why it could sound loud, but the only way to tell is if he moved to the other side of the stage with the camera.
Yeah, George likes reimagining a lot of stuff. Just redid the entire "Wicked Sensation" album for the 30-year anniversary a few years back. In this case, I'd guess he felt the original was a little fast at 115bpm, so he slowed it down a smidge.
That’s my buddy on bass!!!
The sound is awesome
5:43, watch the delay on the cymbal hand. You can't do that without being in the pocket. Jimmy is at the top his his game. He is a legend. For my money, Jimmy D'anda is George's best drummer ever.
Cool to see George doing more BU Vox nowadays.
Where's Jimmy?
Behind the drums
Drums are way too loud..
No… guitars aren’t loud enough
Not to mention the tempo is dragging. This song is dead without a good groove.
Dude it's a cell phone recording from the Balcony. I'm sure if you were more in the room it would of been great. The Whiskey is a small club
@@joerod0- It's true that sometimes audio doesn't pick up correctly on certain sides of a club or stage, so perhaps he was just standing in the 'wrong' position. Some mixing techniques still also go by traditional methods, such as how Van Halen recorded music, Van Halen II for example, they put the drums on the right and the guitars on the left or vice versa. Sometimes they also do the same thing live, so maybe that's how the mixing engineer is doing things here.. no idea. I guess that's why it could sound loud, but the only way to tell is if he moved to the other side of the stage with the camera.
The singer has the range but he needs to work with his presence.
Seems a little slow
Yeah, George likes reimagining a lot of stuff. Just redid the entire "Wicked Sensation" album for the 30-year anniversary a few years back. In this case, I'd guess he felt the original was a little fast at 115bpm, so he slowed it down a smidge.