neonico wrote:i find your aspect of the tidy sound has something ......i think its to do with the clean cut studio hardware like the lexion effects that david uses...
i had these a few years ago and i have to admit everthing that was analog sounded digital after going through a lexicon .....i also made the mistake and had a digital mixer ....now i have a good old moody mixer that cracks and gives stress
the effects i changed to a good old cheap alesis now everything sounds great ....
I think it's more to do with his personality than the technology, it's the style rather than the difference between analogue and digital [an overplayed argument anyway]... he seems like a very precise person, everything is highly considered and analysed, no mistake is allowed to pass... even his interviews are of military precision in their delivery. Blemish and Manafon have a degree of looseness, due in most part to the contribution of others, whos whole way of creating music were at odds with his own, but I don't think it has rubbed off. He did say in one interview that he almost never accepts a first take, and sometimes –to me – his music sounds like there have been so many takes all the life has vanished… what your left with is very polished, but lacking soul.
It’s strange that so many say Manafon and Blemish leave them cold, as for me it’s these collections that have most heart… A lot of Sleepwalkers leaves me feeling rather chilly...