My husband phased some songs from bad witch for fun and you can really hear it.
https://m.soundcloud.com/kukesaur/sets/bad-witch-phased
My husband phased some songs from bad witch for fun and you can really hear it.
https://m.soundcloud.com/kukesaur/sets/bad-witch-phased
Last edited by Andallthatcouldhavebeen; 11-13-2018 at 03:51 PM.
i wouldn't call it a sample since it's trent actually playing it. it comes in and mirrors (heh) the guitar line in verse 2 and it's my favorite part of the song. wish trent would play it live Spoiler: since robin sings the verses, anyway.
I actually can't stand TR's stated impetus and inspiration for Bad Witch, yet I really dig the little album.
Good question, I can't know that precisely lol. But some of those really distorted sounds and the way they repeat, the way Trent and Atticus have been making music on this Trilogy, makes me think they did more than just overlay recordings of sax in real time. Everything from the placement of the mic to the way it's processed by at every single point until the release, the sound could have been untouched and raw or modified, stretched, assembled, enhanced, deconstructed, a hundreds of times.
I don’t think many people are really spending enough time with these records to really get the depth of genius and subtlety that are in them. They are such deep dives. If mankind had a future in fifty years this is the kind of music they would be freaking out about, writing books about, dissecting and debating... I mean Bad Witch alone - it is a new kind of music. If you listen to for what it is and set aside preconceptions about what it is supposed to be - it can’t be classified. It’s like nothing else out there.
I can’t get enough of it. We live in a culture that is so noisy and distracted that this kind of brilliance will never rise above it all to truly be heard, so those of us here needing out about it, and maybe some future better humans than exist now, are the only ones to get a chance to really appreciate it.
Trent Reznor is just so unappreciated in our crappy culture. It’s a crime.
The printed lyric for OAO is "Am I remembering you correctly?" but all I can hear is "Am I remembering you?" Am I...listening correctly?
Also, OAO in general.
Am I remembering you correctly
Over and over again
I’ve always been 10 years ahead of you
What does this mean? Seeing one's own actions ahead of time with respect to lack of free will as per the Quietus interview? That's what I'm getting.
I think it means that the person he was ten years ago was better suited for today. That he always feels like he is changing and whatever he is changing into always ends up being out of step with the rest of society. So he feels out of place and alienated at the time, but years later feels vindicated. Year Zero was ten years ago when he wrote this and it came true. The things that he is feeling and saying, maybe a decade from now, will feel much more relavent and clear, but it will be too late to be able to feel rewarding. The eternal plight of the gifted artist, the prophet, or the one who is awake. Shadows on the cave walls. Truth being told but not understood in the moment. That’s how I take it.
I like how you can hear the scream from I'm Not From This World at the beginning of Over and Out for the final time. Like it's escaping for the last time.
What's this lol ?
http://arcanumifallet.pcriot.com/fetched/04.%20God%20Break%20Down%20the%20Door.mp3?plead=pl ease-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio
"God Break Down The Door [Instrumental]" from this tumblr blog
edit : fan made "instrumental" it seems, pretty cool though
Last edited by StockAvuryah; 12-19-2018 at 01:33 PM.
I just wanted to admit that Bad Witch actually grew on me in a The Fragile and Ghosts I-IV kind of way, which is a very good thing for me.
Guys, is anyone a member of Mix With The Masters?
Because we have a total mix and track breakdown, by Atticus, on there https://mixwiththemasters.com/itt16
This was posted somewhere else here. Specifically that, if anyone WAS a member and chose to rip/share this breakdown, they might be a considered a dick for some reason.
I disagree and would like to see/hear what Atticus has to say. Both because I dig the track and also because I want to hear Atticus speak more.
He sounds like a Bond villain's tech guy.
@sheepdean @paul_guyet Yeah, it got discussed in the 2018 NIN spotting thread (on the last two pages).
Last edited by sonic_discord; 01-06-2019 at 06:01 PM.
On a scale of 1 to dick, I think bootlegging super expensive paid content for a few niche fans to access is much lower on the scale than say, I don’t know, maybe, publically outing the anonymity of the most famous member of a message board that they’re the subject of for some unknown reason. That’s just me tho.
Cough. Cough.
Bad Witch feels like a whole new style or genre of music to me, defying easy classification.
I’d like to do a little genealogy here, and feel free to contribute.
So TR has admitted that he and Atticus were inspired by Blackstar. In God Break Down the Door, it’s clear from the beats, the sax, the vocals that this informed the record. It’s not a rip off, it’s derivative enough, but the influence is unmistakable.
Well, let’s go back to Blackstar. Tony Visconti said he and David were listening to a lot of Kendrick Lamar’s album To Pimp a Butterfly. Go back and listen to it. There are defintely influences there. Not lyrically as much as musically. A distinct part of that influence is the sax.
Well who played the sax on To Pimp a Butterfly? None other than modern jazz great Kamasi Washington.
Kamasi Washington’s The Epic is a clear influence on To Pimp a Butterfly and he’s literally on some of the tracks.
So what’s my point? This isn’t “I think I hear the influence of ____ in this song”, this is a real, proven network of inspiration. I just love this. Musical geniuses inspiring other. Everything is derivative. Give credit where credit is due. Trace is back past Kamasi and where does it go? Some 70’s artists I don’t know enough about... maybe others?
It’s cool to go back and listen to each of these artists and their landmark albums and hear the connections. See what they bring that is unique.
I don’t know, I just love music. Don’t let anyone tell you great, deep, innovative music isn’t still being made.
Yes, To Pimp a Butterfly was a seismic event... and Kamasi Washington has an ENORMOUS list of influences, across the whole history of 20th century music.
A lot of the music I discovered and still love to this day (including Bowie) started with checking out TR's recommendations, and following the bread-crumb trail back into their influences, and so on. If you want to go down the saxophone rabbit hole, get into John Coltrane... I believe Washington has repeatedly cited Transition as one of his most influential albums.
"friends if you call" ?
Friends with your claw?
I hear "fickle friends fickle".
Just listened to We’re In This Together & Play The Goddamned Part back to back and realized they share a very similar 4-note decending motif.
WITT: at around 0:45 - 0:55. Guitars
PTGP: repeatedly after 0:10-0:40 Sax
And they obviously play again throughout both songs again in other places. Do my ears deceive me? Give it a listen!
You might want to take this post here