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Showing posts from March, 2023

Let’s Go Crazy multitrack breakdown

 (updated: 17/05/24) Let’s Go Crazy multitrack analysis Information on Princevault: https://princevault.com/index.php?title=Let%E2%80%99s_Go_Crazy The following 24 tracks of audio described here are from the complete, unedited transfer of the “Let’s Go Crazy” multitrack, the full 7-minute version that appears as the ‘Special Dance Mix’. The version of the multitrack in common circulation on the internet has some sections of the tracks muted ·       1. Clap – from the Linn LM-1 drum machine. Possibly triggered manually by Bobby Z. hitting Simmons SDS-V pad during live take. ·       2. Kick – Linn LM-1. Part of the drum loop. ·       3. Snare – Linn LM-1. Looped throughout the song. Except the snare parts at the ending were triggered off another LM-1 with a condenser mic in Bobby’s snare. ·       4. Hi-hat – includes lots of bleed from live take. ·   ...

The Police Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic versions

 (last updated: mm/dd/yyyy) Early demo – recorded c. January 1977 at Mike Howlett’s attic studio in Acton, London using his TEAC 4-track recorder. This was before Portastudios were available. Sting is the sole performer on the demo. He plays acoustic guitar (the instrument he wrote it on), bass guitar and a small African drum for accompaniment. Beautiful in its rawest form, slightly Latin-inspired feel too. But was clearly too soft and sentimental for The Police at the time, also accounting for the explosion of punk in the UK. Officially released on Police Academy in 1997 by Mike Howlett. Sting performed an acoustic rendition like this demo on VH1 Storytellers in 1996. 1981 demo – recorded by Sting and keyboardist Jean Roussel in early January 1981 at Le Studio (Morin Heights, Canada), engineered by Nick Blagona. Arguably it is a professional demo this time, not a home demo. The drum machine pattern is identifiably the ‘Bossa Nova’ rhythm preset on a Roland CR78, accompanied b...