![]() ![]() It reminds me of how John Lennon got his distorted sound on the Beatles song "Revolution". A lot like an Octavia, but without the octave higher sound. ![]() But the grit is very short-lived, so that the core of the note is relatively sounds as if the initial attack is what is distorted. ![]() It's quite lo-fi and gritty in nature, almost as if the input of the amp is being overdriven. The guitar sound on "Work Together" sounds much more organic in nature, or like it's naturally produced. My experiences with fuzz are that they are very violin-y, and add a lot of sustain. It got me thinking, "How does one get that tone?"Īt first, one might think it's a fuzz pedal. In a way, I suppose, what happened to Bob Hite's collection carried on a grand tradition of sorts in the record collecting business.I was recently digging the tone on the intro slide guitar to this fantastic Canned Heat song. I posted the following a week ago in the "Estate Planning and Your Music Collection" thread in Off-Topic, but I think it warrants being posted here, too: How many poor African-Americans sold their old 78s to these collectors 40 and 50 years ago for mere pennies, because the white collectors who came around in the poor black neighborhoods were determined to find bargains? In a way, I suppose, what happened to Bob Hite's collection carried on a grand tradition of sorts in the record collecting business. They knew what they were buying and what each disc was worth.she did not, and she got robbed in broad daylight by people with very famous reputations, many of whom purported themselves to be "friends" of Bob's. His wife, however, did not understand what was valuable and what was not in that collection.Īnd some of the world's best known collectors of rare 78s swooped in on her in the weeks and months after her loss and in her grief, and cherrypicked the rarest and most valuable pieces for pennies on the dollar in terms of actual value. The late Bob Hite, lead singer for the famed 60s group Canned Heat, died too young, and left behind a collection of tens of thousands of rare old blues/jazz/country 78s. Click to expand.I posted the following a week ago in the "Estate Planning and Your Music Collection" thread in Off-Topic, but I think it warrants being posted here, too: ![]()
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