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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 14 2005 at 02:43 |
I'm a big Mike Keneally fan ... I have most of his albums.
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oliverstoned
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Joined: March 26 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 6308
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Posted: September 14 2005 at 02:49 |
I hope it's not heavy?
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MikeEnRegalia
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Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 14 2005 at 02:54 |
^ You're a little "metal-phobic", aren't you? Don't worry, it's not heavy. There are occasional outbursts of guitar, but not much more heavy than on Zappa's albums.
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator
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Joined: March 26 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 6308
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Posted: September 14 2005 at 03:57 |
Yes, i am.
The only hard band i can stand is Led zep (and not all)
Edited by oliverstoned
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator
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Joined: March 26 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 6308
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Posted: September 14 2005 at 04:02 |
So, i'll tell you how i found it as soon as i get it.
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arcer
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 01 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1239
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 04:42 |
Fun to read all this stuff about extremely high end systrems blah blah blah blah....
I used to be a bit pure-blood about hi-fi - all concerned about valves, cabling, etc etc
lately however I have realised one important thing.
Most modern rock music is recorded wholly in the digital domain. The guitar tones are modelled and plugged straight into a soundcard, the keyboard tones are modelled analogue synths, the drums are loops, the processing is all digital, the reverbs are convolution models. The vocals are pitch corrected digitally. Hardly anything recorded these days has not been slapped through half a dozen digital process to give it more 'life', 'warmth', 'bounce', 'depth'... whatever. And most of this is done inside the very PC or Mac that everyone is saying cannot reporoduce music accurately.
Sure classical and jazz are still largely recorded using acoustic instruments across air with nothing in the way. Beyond that though, any rock music recorded in the last 10 years is a lost cause in terms of 'transparent' reproduction. There is nothing transparent about the music, it is all emulation. And to be honest I can't hear the difference.
I myself have a very old and very beloved Vox AC30, full of glorious warm tubes and 30 years of grime and grit from being lugged all over filthy bars and gig venues. The other day I was listening to some things a friend had recorded on PC using a cheap guitar and Native Instruments' new AC Box Combo from its amp simulation series. I couldn't honestly tell the difference. I certainly wouldn't be able to detect anything out of the ordinary in the context of a mix. And I am not the only one. I defy anyone to find me a rock guitar player who is only using analogue processing and a single amplifier turned up to 11. Modelling, emulation and simulation are not esoterica, they are now the standard tools of the musician's trade. I'm even beginning to see bands who have dispensed with amplification completely and have opted to use laptops, Guitar Rig and plug straight into the mixing desk. The same goes for keyboard players.
This is how modern music is made. At this very moment I'm listening to the new Eels album on my 1400 euro Dell PC fitted with an Audigy 2 ZS soundcard, hooked up to Alesis M1 Active monitors (my recording set-up) and it sounds just fine.
You can spend 10 grand on any system you want but if you're listening to modern rock music you might as well listen to it on an 800 euro pc with a soundblaster and a half decent set of speakers. It will reproduce the digital recording as well as anything in my book.
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 05:01 |
^ arcer:
- Check out Presto Ballet - Peace Among the Ruins. It was recorded in 2004 and they used no digital equipment whatsoever. Analog synths, analog tapes ... it sounds amazing.
- Incidentally: You say that you can't hear the difference of many "emulated" sounds compared to the original. Are you talking about listening on cheap equipment or high end?
It sounds a little odd that you say that they sound virtually identical and on the other hand that the digital version "kind of sucks".
Edited by MikeEnRegalia
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 05:24 |
arcer wrote:
Most modern rock music is recorded wholly in the digital domain. The guitar tones are modelled and plugged straight into a soundcard, the keyboard tones are modelled analogue synths, the drums are loops, the processing is all digital, the reverbs are convolution models. The vocals are pitch corrected digitally. Hardly anything recorded these days has not been slapped through half a dozen digital process to give it more 'life', 'warmth', 'bounce', 'depth'... whatever. And most of this is done inside the very PC or Mac that everyone is saying cannot reporoduce music accurately.
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The "modern" bands i listen to uses non of these effects not even guitar modeling...the old stuff is still the best stuff
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 05:48 |
maidenrulez wrote:
arcer wrote:
Most modern rock music is recorded wholly in the digital domain. The guitar tones are modelled and plugged straight into a soundcard, the keyboard tones are modelled analogue synths, the drums are loops, the processing is all digital, the reverbs are convolution models. The vocals are pitch corrected digitally. Hardly anything recorded these days has not been slapped through half a dozen digital process to give it more 'life', 'warmth', 'bounce', 'depth'... whatever. And most of this is done inside the very PC or Mac that everyone is saying cannot reporoduce music accurately.
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The "modern" bands i listen to uses non of these effects not even guitar modeling...the old stuff is still the best stuff
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The question is: IF (for the sake of this discussion) the modelled sounds are as good as the original, so that you can't even tell them apart when listening on a good system ... are they not equal then?
Many people complain about Presto Ballet for instance, saying that all that digital recording, Pro Tools etc. is messing up the sound and makes it sterile ... they don't even know that none of these tools were used. Today when a recording sounds crystal clear and just perfect, everyone automatically assumes that it has been digitally "enhanced" ... that isn't so.
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Lindsay Lohan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 25 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 3254
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 06:04 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
maidenrulez wrote:
arcer wrote:
Most modern rock music is recorded wholly in the digital domain. The guitar tones are modelled and plugged straight into a soundcard, the keyboard tones are modelled analogue synths, the drums are loops, the processing is all digital, the reverbs are convolution models. The vocals are pitch corrected digitally. Hardly anything recorded these days has not been slapped through half a dozen digital process to give it more 'life', 'warmth', 'bounce', 'depth'... whatever. And most of this is done inside the very PC or Mac that everyone is saying cannot reporoduce music accurately.
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The "modern" bands i listen to uses non of these effects not even guitar modeling...the old stuff is still the best stuff
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The question is: IF (for the sake of this discussion) the modelled sounds are as good as the original, so that you can't even tell them apart when listening on a good system ... are they not equal then?
Many people complain about Presto Ballet for instance, saying that all that digital recording, Pro Tools etc. is messing up the sound and makes it sterile ... they don't even know that none of these tools were used. Today when a recording sounds crystal clear and just perfect, everyone automatically assumes that it has been digitally "enhanced" ... that isn't so.
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Now with guitar modeling tools you are supposed to make it sound like a MARSSHALL JCM 2000 forexample or a FENDER BASSMAN and i am pretty sure you can get a decent sound but not even close to the original stuff
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 06:18 |
maidenrulez wrote:
Now with guitar modeling tools you are supposed to make it sound like a MARSSHALL JCM 2000 forexample or a FENDER BASSMAN and i am pretty sure you can get a decent sound but not even close to the original stuff
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Don't be so sure ... these technologies are constantly improving. I bought the Line6 POD some years ago and it was clearly inferior to the "real thing". But since then a lot has changed. And my Vox ToneLab SE does a really good job at simulating the real amps - by cleverly using digital AND analog technologies.
BTW: If you have some background knowledge in guitar amps you'll know Vox as one of the classic amp manufacturers of the 60's/70's (in the beginning there were Fender, Vox and Marshall). They know something about amps and vintage sounds ...
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arcer
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 01 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1239
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 06:41 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
^ arcer:
- Check out Presto Ballet - Peace Among the Ruins. It was recorded in 2004 and they used no digital equipment whatsoever. Analog synths, analog tapes ... it sounds amazing.
- Incidentally: You say that you can't hear the difference of many "emulated" sounds compared to the original. Are you talking about listening on cheap equipment or high end?
It sounds a little odd that you say that they sound virtually identical and on the other hand that the digital version "kind of sucks".
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I'm not saying there aren't people out there recording material on tape using analogue gear and I agree that real instruments across air sound better than anything, but merely that most modern rock music is recorded almost completely in the digital domain and therefore applying very high end gear to warm this stuff up is sort of pointless.
Sure there is a standard at which you should be reproducing music but I, for one, do not believe that you need thousands and thousands of euro worth gear to adequately reporoduce sounds that have been created in the digital domain.
And as a sometime musician I agree that there is nothing quite like the trouser-flapping experience of plugging in a good guitar into a good valve amp, turning the thing all the way up, hitting a powerchord and revelling in all that natural saturation but as far as recording goes, in the context of a full mix, I can't hear any difference between a real amp and a modelled version - particularly Native Instruments whose models are stunningly real. I don't think I ever said the digital versions suck. I actually think they are fantastic and give me a sonic armoury I could never have dreamed of owning in hardware form.
I reckon you can reproduce music to a very high standard on a PC using high quality MP3s, a good soundcard and some decent monitors. Many people record albums to a high standard on such tools, why should listening to the same music be any different.
Put it this way, and here I'm echoing something James Lee said earlier in the thread, I have a 5,000+ euro system in my living room that hardly ever gets used anymore, except for vinyl. I'm more than happy listening to 192 bit rate MP3s in my office on my adequate Alesis monitors and Audigy soundcard or on my i-pod in the car.
It should be about the music not the medium.
Edited by arcer
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 06:52 |
arcer wrote:
I reckon you can reproduce music to a very high standard on a PC using high quality MP3s, a good soundcard and some decent monitors. Many people record albums to a high standard on such tools, why should listening to the same music be any different.
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At home I'm using the Audigy 2 ZS connected to my Harman Kardon amp + Elac speakers. It's not a real HiFi-Amp, but still pretty good compared to even good PC speakers (like Klipsch or Logitech), and I can easily hear the difference between mp3 (even 256kbps) and CD audio (ripped in WMA Lossless).
arcer wrote:
Put it this way, and here I'm echoing something James Lee said earlier in the thread, I have a 5,000+ euro system in my living room that hardly ever gets used anymore, except for vinyl. I'm more than happy listening to 192 bit rate MP3s in my office on my adequate Alesis monitors and Audigy soundcard or on my i-pod in the car.
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In the office I use 128kbps WMAs just because I'm lazy, and I hardly ever listen to music at loud volume. I use Winamp with the Zyrax volume normalizer plugin at a very low volume, and that's a good solution for that situation.
arcer wrote:
It should be about the music not the medium.
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Exactly.
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 26 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 6308
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 06:56 |
arcer wrote:
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
^ arcer:
- Check out Presto Ballet - Peace Among the Ruins. It was recorded in 2004 and they used no digital equipment whatsoever. Analog synths, analog tapes ... it sounds amazing.
- Incidentally: You say that you can't hear the difference of many "emulated" sounds compared to the original. Are you talking about listening on cheap equipment or high end?It sounds a little odd that you say that they sound virtually identical and on the other hand that the digital version "kind of sucks".
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I'm not saying there aren't people out there recording material on tape using analogue gear and I agree that real instruments across air sound better than anything, but merely that most modern rock music is recorded almost completely in the digital domain and therefore applying very high end gear to warm this stuff up is sort of pointless.
Sure there is a standard at which you should be reproducing music but I, for one, do not believe that you need thousands and thousands of euro worth gear to adequately reporoduce sounds that have been created in the digital domain.
And as a sometime musician I agree that there is nothing quite like the trouser-flapping experience of plugging in a good guitar into a good valve amp, turning the thing all the way up, hitting a powerchord and revelling in all that natural saturation but as far as recording goes, in the context of a full mix, I can't hear any difference between a real amp and a modelled version - particularly Native Instruments whose models are stunningly real. I don't think I ever said the digital versions suck. I actually think they are fantastic and give me a sonic armoury I could never have dreamed of owning in hardware form.
I reckon you can reproduce music to a very high standard on a PC using high quality MP3s, a good soundcard and some decent monitors. Many people record albums to a high standard on such tools, why should listening to the same music be any different.
Put it this way, and here I'm echoing something James Lee said earlier in the thread, I have a 5,000+ euro system in my living room that hardly ever gets used anymore, except for vinyl. I'm more than happy listening to 192 bit rate MP3s in my office on my adequate Alesis monitors and Audigy soundcard or on my i-pod in the car.
It should be about the music not the medium.
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If you prefer your PC over your 5000€ system, it means that your system doesn't works at all...
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arcer
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 01 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1239
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:05 |
oliverstoned wrote:
arcer wrote:
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
^ arcer:
- Check out Presto Ballet - Peace Among the Ruins. It was recorded in 2004 and they used no digital equipment whatsoever. Analog synths, analog tapes ... it sounds amazing.
- Incidentally: You say that you can't hear the difference of many "emulated" sounds compared to the original. Are you talking about listening on cheap equipment or high end?It sounds a little odd that you say that they sound virtually identical and on the other hand that the digital version "kind of sucks".
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I'm not saying there aren't people out there recording material on tape using analogue gear and I agree that real instruments across air sound better than anything, but merely that most modern rock music is recorded almost completely in the digital domain and therefore applying very high end gear to warm this stuff up is sort of pointless.
Sure there is a standard at which you should be reproducing music but I, for one, do not believe that you need thousands and thousands of euro worth gear to adequately reporoduce sounds that have been created in the digital domain.
And as a sometime musician I agree that there is nothing quite like the trouser-flapping experience of plugging in a good guitar into a good valve amp, turning the thing all the way up, hitting a powerchord and revelling in all that natural saturation but as far as recording goes, in the context of a full mix, I can't hear any difference between a real amp and a modelled version - particularly Native Instruments whose models are stunningly real. I don't think I ever said the digital versions suck. I actually think they are fantastic and give me a sonic armoury I could never have dreamed of owning in hardware form.
I reckon you can reproduce music to a very high standard on a PC using high quality MP3s, a good soundcard and some decent monitors. Many people record albums to a high standard on such tools, why should listening to the same music be any different.
Put it this way, and here I'm echoing something James Lee said earlier in the thread, I have a 5,000+ euro system in my living room that hardly ever gets used anymore, except for vinyl. I'm more than happy listening to 192 bit rate MP3s in my office on my adequate Alesis monitors and Audigy soundcard or on my i-pod in the car.
It should be about the music not the medium.
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If you prefer your PC over your 5000€ system, it means that your system doesn't works at all...
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No it just means that I like music not electronics
actually what it really means is that after years of poring over hi-fi porn mags I have finally discovered that it's how I respond to the music not its reproduction that is important. I have friends who listen to albums of pink and white noise to demonstrate the brilliance of their 30k systems and that, my friend, is just silly
Edited by arcer
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:11 |
One hundred years ago people listened to "crappy" mono radio in a quality that compares to that of 64kbps mp3 ... and they were amazed.
Listen to the music, not the medium ... that really makes sense.
It's the same with cars, houses etc. ... there's always someone who has a better one than you, it makes no sense to go for the PERFECT solution.
I'm not saying that you're wrong, oliver ... I'm just saying that just because you think that such a system is necessary, it doesn't have to be the perfect solution for other people.
P.S.: What's better - a $1000 system with $4000 spent on CDs, or a $5000 system with no music?
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator
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Joined: March 26 2004
Location: France
Status: Offline
Points: 6308
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:12 |
It just show that most people are disapointed in hifi cause they received bad advices from sellers, who just want to sell as much as possible.
You prefer music over electronics...me too.
With a PC you loose half of the music and the musicality (ability of a system to let the music and the emotion flows) is Zero.
What's your hifi system? i'm just curious
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Online
Points: 21106
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:19 |
oliverstoned wrote:
It just show that most people are disapointed in hifi cause they received bad advices from sellers, who just want to sell as much as possible.
You prefer music over electronics...me too. With a PC you loose half of the music and the musicality (ability of a system to let the music and the emotion flows) is Zero.
What's your hifi system? i'm just curious
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You're really pathetic ... a hopeless case. Can't you at least add something like "I think" or "IMO" or anything, it's really just your opinion - which I have proven to be wrong.
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arcer
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 01 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 1239
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:26 |
Myryad MP100 pre amp and MP240 power amp
Linn LP 12 with Sumiko Blue Point MC
Musical Fidelity XLP pre amp
Marantz CD 63 SE CD player
Admittedly my speakers (pair of old RTL TDL3s) aren't up to the job and my cabling needs an uprgrade.
And I do listen to this system when I reall have time to concentrate on music, but these opportunities are very few and far between and when I do crank it up 90% of the time it's to do justice to vinyl. For casual listening I get just as much enjoyment from the so-called low end crap in my office or on my cheap and cheerful sony noise cancelling phones and i-pod.
I love having a nice system for occasional use and can add the enjoyment of good reproduction to the enjoyment of the music but ultimately I just like listening to the music. The reproduction has to be of a certain standard but once it hits the level of a half decent car stereo I'm happy enough.
In fact it amazes me that people get so obsessed about the transaparency of a system. I've heard soome very high end so-called transparent systems featuring things like Nautilus speakers, Clearaudio refererence and some pretty esoteric amps and most of the time they just made my ears hurt. I want the music to sing not teach me science.
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Kohllapse
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 14 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1063
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Posted: September 15 2005 at 07:29 |
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