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John Frusciante!!!!

Posted on 6/28/16 at 11:34 pm
Posted by rds dc
Member since Jun 2008
19811 posts
Posted on 6/28/16 at 11:34 pm


The next two hours are probably going to suck so here is something awesome!

Oh wait, this F'ing Yes!
Posted by SUB
Member since Jan 2001
Member since Jan 2009
20865 posts
Posted on 6/29/16 at 9:25 am to
I love him, but I'm a little confused...why are the next two hours going to suck and why are you posting these videos?

Did you eat some bad shrooms?
This post was edited on 6/29/16 at 9:28 am
Posted by HammerheadLincoln
The farther west the farther out
Member since May 2015
4874 posts
Posted on 6/29/16 at 9:44 am to
Frusciante is a great musician

Love his stuff with the Peppers and his solo work as well.

But why are the next two hours going to suck?
Posted by SUB
Member since Jan 2001
Member since Jan 2009
20865 posts
Posted on 6/29/16 at 10:01 am to
Since the OP was obviously high when he started this thread, I'll provide some relevant Frusciante news that I meant to post a couple of weeks ago.

The Black Knights second album has been released, which he created the music for. He recently added a new post to his site, about the album and that he's released the instrumental tracks on bandcamp for anyone who wants to listen.

LINK

quote:

I have put my instrumental mixes of all the tracks from Black Knights album The Almighty, on which I made all the music, up on my Soundcloud and Bandcamp, where they can be streamed or downloaded for free.
The artwork for this online album was done by Aura T-09.
I played digital and analog synthesizers, digital and analog drum machines, samples, acoustic and electric guitar, and early 1980s guitar synthesizers. The guitars are the only instruments I played with my hands in the traditional manner. The rest I played by programming, which one also does with they’re hands, though not in real time; the point is, I didn’t play any keyboards or drum pads.
My live room, created by contractor Jacques Lacroix, acoustician Vincent Van Hoff, and my studio manager Anthony Zamora, was the main place I got room sounds, reverbs, and atmosphere on these recordings. I sent sounds and performances from my computer into the room where they would come through a speaker, making the room reverberate, which would then be picked up by a room mic, the cable of which would bring this sound to my mixing board, from where it would return to the computer, where I would combine the rooms acoustics with the source sound. I’d generally do a certain amount of subtractive eq on my computer when sending the sound into the room, then on my mixing board when the sound came back to me, and also on the computer again when fitting it into the entire mix. These are two pictures of the room, each from opposite angles.

Those of you who do not have the space or means to have a live room built, can certainly use a bathroom for the same purpose. You’d be surprised how much you can tune a room by creative application of subtractive eq.
One room technique I used from time to time, was to send a recorded performance backwards into the room, record what the room did, then flip that around backwards, and place it slightly before the source sound, exactly positioned so that the highest volume of backwards reverberation ends exactly when the source sound begins. This created the effect of the sound seeming to come from the room, rather than the room sound coming from the source sound; the reverse of natures laws which govern acoustics.
I also did this same thing with my AMS digital reverb, the only other source of reverb I used on the record. A good example of this is the tune Techniques And Shockwaves, where midway into the song, the only drums are just a series of tom hits which are all preceded by a long backwards reverb, as if each sound was coming from thin air; a natural, forwards reverb then follows.
Due to years of experience with my live room, I was also in the habit of making imitations of room sounds from outer space, by triggering modular synth patches with the attacks of a kick or snare performance, often then sending these sounds into the live room as well. This made for some huge sounding drums in the places I did it.
I’m very proud of this music, and think it works very well as an instrumental album, though it wasn’t intended to be one. There’s a lot going on in these tracks that gets virtually lost on the original vocal versions.
My thanks goes out to Crisis, Monk, and the other vocalists for doing the performances which inspired me to mute and unmute tracks in the specicific ways I did. That’s their hidden contribution to The Almighty Instrumental Mixes. It has resulted in some very interesting instrumental song arrangements.
This stuff was recorded throughout the first half of 2013. As always during the last 9 years, I made this music to learn, and because it was what I wanted to hear. I wanted to hear slow grooves, and explore the different kinds of subtle off-timeness which make grooves flow in different ways. For several years prior to this I’d been very busy on the drums, making them a lead instrument, and so here I avoided playing super fast or extremely off-time, or doing excessively odd time signatures, partly out of musical consideration for the other vocalists, but mainly because I just didn’t want to show off on drums at that time. Now, however…


Hopefully we get another release. I'd like to see him move in a new direction. Some of the electronic stuff is beginning to get stale.
This post was edited on 6/29/16 at 10:02 am
Posted by Cooter Davenport
Austin, TX
Member since Apr 2012
9006 posts
Posted on 6/29/16 at 10:43 am to
Live at Slane Castle is my favorite concert DVD.
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