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But in the 20 years I've been playing, I've never even once been recorded, nor ever have I heard myself on any recording....until last
night.
My initial gut reaction?
Holy carp! I honestly didn't know I sounded THAT good!?! It sounded very professional, like a studio grade performance.
Sorry, but I mean (and please understand, I'm definitely NOT trying to sound arrogant, just trying to be honest, even to myself)
everyone has always said that I was very good. And I have always taken that with a pound of salt (being rather self conscious, knowing
my own flaws and stumbles, knowing how hard I've worked to get where I am), but now I heard what everyone else hears and boy did
it surprise me!
The hardest thing, believe it or not, was trying to duplicate my own performance based on the playback (again, with Carte Blanche, it
wasn't a requirement to clone my own previous effort).
I guess we humans don't do anything quite the same exact way any two times in a row, being much more a matter of feel and
perception in the heat of a given moment, than a dull dry mathematical formula.
Oh well!
Just wanted to share that. Have a good day!
No great rhythm player in me, but damn if it's not one of the funnest things in the world (well, if you're like me you need to have a good drummer, then it's one of the funnest things in the world). I can only imagine what a pro player and the drummer I jam with could do... yowsa. Just started recording with a yamaha all in 1 thing (the awe16 or 24 or soemthing), very nice to hear it compressed and a little bit mastered afterwards and everything, but far from the buttery sound you hear on the radio. Guess thats why sound engineering is it's own discipline hm?
/rereads post, begins to feel 'funnest' is not actually part of our language, becomes determined to change this fact, learns 'funest' is right out, now a bit disheartened, gets back to work