Slight correction: "Tighten Up" was produced by Danger Mouse (http://theblackkeysfanlounge.com/2010/02/brothers-the-black-keys-new-album-out-may-18-2010/).
The rest of the album was produced by Mark Neil (http://theblackkeysfanlounge.com/2010/01/interview-mark-neill-on-recording-the-black-keys-new-album-2010/), which is a pretty cool step after partnering with Danger Mouse in Attack and Release. From his MySpace, Mark discusses his choise to exclusively use "vintage equipment" in his studio:
“It’s not that I was into buying “vintage” equipment back in the 1970s, it’s just that it was all I could afford. It was only after I figured out how to get the sound on the equipment that I realized the inferiority of 24-track studio recordings and the superior sound produced by two-track tape machines. The sound was so much bigger than the commercial studios and had such great clarity.”
High hopes for the southern rock/blues dio ( from Akron, Ohio. The real deal (http://theshantyblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/from-north-mississippi-cotton-fields-to.html).
Slight correction: "Tighten Up" was produced by Danger Mouse (http://theblackkeysfanlounge.com/2010/02/brothers-the-black-keys-new-album-out-may-18-2010/).
ReplyDeleteThe rest of the album was produced by Mark Neil (http://theblackkeysfanlounge.com/2010/01/interview-mark-neill-on-recording-the-black-keys-new-album-2010/), which is a pretty cool step after partnering with Danger Mouse in Attack and Release. From his MySpace, Mark discusses his choise to exclusively use "vintage equipment" in his studio:
“It’s not that I was into buying “vintage” equipment back in the 1970s, it’s just that it was all I could afford. It was only after I figured out how to get the sound on the equipment that I realized the inferiority of 24-track studio recordings and the superior sound produced by two-track tape machines. The sound was so much bigger than the commercial studios and had such great clarity.”
High hopes for the southern rock/blues dio ( from Akron, Ohio. The real deal (http://theshantyblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/from-north-mississippi-cotton-fields-to.html).