First of all, many thanks to Donny,Gary, Denny,DonM, JohnC, Alex, Eddie, Andrea, Mike, Terry, DanO, and AJ for listening to this west coast asian hillbilly (hills of San Francisco that is) attempt to yodel.
Originally posted by Dnj:
Asian Cowboy West Coast friend!!
Definitely Asian (chinese-american) and living way out West (any further and I'd be in the ocean),but not a 'real' cowboy cuz:
My legs ain’t bowed, and my cheeks ain’t tan
I’m a cowboy who never saw a cow
Never roped a steer ’cause I don’t know how
And I sure ain’t fixin’ to startin now
Oh, yippee-i-o-ki-ay, yippee-i-o-ki-ay
Originally posted by Dnj:
I hope to listen to many more tunes in the future using the TYROS!
Now that I got a more conveniently simple way to record (thanks to the Korg D1200mkII) I promise to add more songs performed on the Tyros to my website very soon.
Originally posted by DonM:
Well my hat's off to ya partner!
Great job!
DonM
Hey Don, does this mean I pass the audition to come sit in with you and your country music buddies? Let me know when Eddy Arnold or George Jones are in town.
Originally posted by trtjazz:
I expected some real yodeling and there really wasn't per se.
Yep, never been to the Swiss Alps or had any real yodeling experience. I merely recorded this song as a 'tongue in cheek' response to Don Mason's & the other's song request challenge, and as a excuse to finally perform a quick first song tryout on the new digital recorder.
In live performance, I always add the tyros vocalizer's 'std duet' harmony in the chorus 'falsetto' section, mostly to help cover up whatever yodeling ability I lack. I had initially attempted to record the vocals using the tyros' built in vocalizer, but quickly discovered that, even though the vocalizer sounds acceptable (imo) in a live performance situation, when recording, all the vocalizers flaws and shortcoming are revealed. I had spent a frustrating unsuccessful amount of time trying to tweak the vocalizer's input/out signals to keep the signal from distorting (too much signal) or harmonies cutting out (too little signal), so just scraped this idea altogether and went with recording it naked, revealing vocal flaws and all. I'm now seriously considering purchasing a TC-Helicon Voiceworks Vocal Processor to dedicate for recording purposes.
Now that I own a dedicated standalone digital multitrack recorder (thanks to the recommendations from others who also use standalone recorders here), I can now appreciate the convenience of recording on it vs on the PC via Cakewalk Sonar (which I also own). For whatever reason, the simplicity & convenience of physical access to knobs & sliders feels more condusive to making music than mousing around on a computer screen. I think the Korg D1200mkII is an excellent addition to my modest music studio. Btw, I only recorded Cattle Call in 16 bit mode because my only intention was for posting the song in MP3 format on the internet. It's amazing how much more musical detail is preserved when heard in the original 16 bit mode on the recorder, compared to what you guys hear in the compressed audio format (48kps) that I have it posted at on my website. When a recording is made in 24 bit mode, the difference I hear between it & 16 bit is a 'smoother' less rigid quality to acoustic vocal & acoustic instrument phrasing. For serious CD purposes, I definitely will be recording in 24 bit mode.
Originally posted by DanO1:
I listen to this while riding in my old pick up truck on a dirt road,with the moon shining above, stars bright in the sky ,cricket's chirping and my Ipod . 'Ipod'? Wow, cool, which model did you get? I had to make a hard decision between getting an Ipod or the Korg DAW recorder. I still have the Ipod at the top of my wishlist though. I bet you have a hard time keeping yours away from your kids.
Thanks again to everyone for listening to my music. Y'all come back now y'hear? - Scott