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Radiohead

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Check out my comment :D

 

Who is Lea?

I wouldn't be proud of it if I were you.

 

 

But dammit, I'm not her for 10 days and what do I get on DAS? just another post with no news of the LP7! :angry:

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  • Lol I haven't been here in 5 years but I decided to pop my head back in for some nostalgia. Seems like this was my last post so here's an update... I finally saw Radiohead live in Manchester in 2017 a

The answer why people call it LP7 is that there isn't a name for it, and when you talk about Radiohead's LP 7 people knows it's about the 7th album.

 

It's like people talking about the unnamed 4th coldplay album as LP4 & Oasis' 7 album as LP7 etc.

Nope, we stole the title LP4 from Autechre who released their 5th album titled LP5 in 1998 :smug:

I just can't help but fall in love with 'A Reminder'... wow, what a song! :heart:

Radiohead mastering seventh album in New York

Fan posts of meeting with band

5 hours ago

 

Radiohead are currently mastering their seventh album in New York.

 

According to a posting on fan website Ateaseweb by member the king left, some of the band were at a Spoon listening party.

 

Radiohead members Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien and producer Nigel Godrich turned up to the playback taking place in New York.

 

The poster wrote: "They're in the city mastering the album. Then they're going to listen to it, see what they think. So, we're almost there, maybe."

 

The poster's friend Marty also asked Greenwood if one of the much mooted tracks would make it onto the release.

 

He wrote: "Oh yeah when Marty asked Colin (Greenwood) if 'Nude' was going to be on LP7Colin looked uncomfortable, said "hehe hehe, maybe, if we can do it right..." and slinked back inside. This was after Marty gave him a Camel Ultra Light too. Some people, I tell you. Favours for favour(s) my ass."

 

A release date for the album has yet to be announced, but it is believed the album, the follow-up to 2003's 'Hail To The Thief', will be out before the end of the year.

 

http://www.nme.com/news/radiohead/29715

 

No new news, but it's good to see radiohead in the news.

Woow! Nice pic ella!

Ive never seen that one before, those glasses :lol:

Radiohead mastering seventh album in New York

Fan posts of meeting with band

5 hours ago

 

Radiohead are currently mastering their seventh album in New York.

 

According to a posting on fan website Ateaseweb by member the king left, some of the band were at a Spoon listening party.

 

Radiohead members Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien and producer Nigel Godrich turned up to the playback taking place in New York.

 

The poster wrote: "They're in the city mastering the album. Then they're going to listen to it, see what they think. So, we're almost there, maybe."

 

The poster's friend Marty also asked Greenwood if one of the much mooted tracks would make it onto the release.

 

He wrote: "Oh yeah when Marty asked Colin (Greenwood) if 'Nude' was going to be on LP7Colin looked uncomfortable, said "hehe hehe, maybe, if we can do it right..." and slinked back inside. This was after Marty gave him a Camel Ultra Light too. Some people, I tell you. Favours for favour(s) my ass."

 

A release date for the album has yet to be announced, but it is believed the album, the follow-up to 2003's 'Hail To The Thief', will be out before the end of the year.

 

http://www.nme.com/news/radiohead/29715

 

No new news, but it's good to see radiohead in the news.

 

Cheers Dave :)

What's funny is that last week the NME was reporting that the album was finished, and this week they are reporting that it ain't finished...

What's funny is that last week the NME was reporting that the album was finished, and this week they are reporting that it ain't finished...

 

 

well, if they're mastering it, it's obviously finished, no? i mean, nobody would master an unfinished album. correct me if i'm wrong. :wacko:

But the way the NME was putting it across was that the album was all done and dusted.

 

Mastering an album can take months to get it the way the band wants it.

But the way the NME was putting it across was that the album was all done and dusted.

 

Mastering an album can take months to get it the way the band wants it.

actually, from what i've heard, mastering is usually done in one session and only takes a day. :P

Mastering, a form of audio post-production, is the process of preparing and transferring recorded audio from a source containing the final mix to a data storage device (the master); the source from which all copies will be produced.

There's more on it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastering

"The source material is processed using equalization, compression, limiting, noise reduction and other processes."

 

So if it takes a day, why do some bands take months to say "we are finished making the album, just mastering it" to "we have finished mastering and it will be released on such and such a day"

ah, NME is just boasting the facts to make the articles look more attractive.

The NME lies all the time, like saying that the Horrors are good.

Nah, Nah, Nah, Mastering can take time. It's a hard job that requires a lot of skill. Trust me.

 

You can really fuck up a mix if you don't do it right. However - get a good mastering engineer and you can come away with something that sounds far better than it did beforehand. And I'm sure they want to be there to make sure it's a good job.

Good grief. That really shows how bankrupt on integrity the NME is. One guy, supposedly from New York, posts this stuff on atease with nothing but a couple of pictures of him and Colin as proof that anything ever happened at whatever time, and the NME go and repeat it for publication as gospel truth. Bad, lazy journalism if you ask me. Sure, I believe the guy pretty much, the stuff he posted was pretty convincing, but I'm not writing professionally. You need more proof than one person on a board full of jokers who like to make up stories out of boredom.

Good grief. That really shows how bankrupt on integrity the NME is. One guy, supposedly from New York, posts this stuff on atease with nothing but a couple of pictures of him and Colin as proof that anything ever happened at whatever time, and the NME go and repeat it for publication as gospel truth. Bad, lazy journalism if you ask me. Sure, I believe the guy pretty much, the stuff he posted was pretty convincing, but I'm not writing professionally. You need more proof than one person on a board full of jokers who like to make up stories out of boredom.

 

Excactly! When you're one of englands biggest music magazines you don't use people posting on a message board as a source. No matter how believeable they seem to be. NME = Crap :P

"The source material is processed using equalization, compression, limiting, noise reduction and other processes."

 

So if it takes a day, why do some bands take months to say "we are finished making the album, just mastering it" to "we have finished mastering and it will be released on such and such a day"

 

i dunno. i've been lurking on atease a lot lately, and there are a few folks who post there who know a lot about the recording/mixing/mastering process. here are a couple of quotes from Wonsaponatime (mr know-all of atease):

"Mastering usually only takes one day. At least every previous Radiohead album and probably 99% of all records are mastered in a single session.

Mixing HTTT took 2 months, btw. The reason probably is that during mixing they keep on fixing things, adding the occasional overdub etc."

"Kid A was mastered in a single session at Abbey Road in London. Likewise all other albums by various bands where I know something about the mastering process were done in one day. Why? Because mastering is all about getting an overall sound to recordings that stem from different sessions, in this case also very different locations. And in order to achieve that you do it all in one go."

 

here's another quote from a guy talking about getting his band's cd mastered: "mastering is done relatively quickly (compared to mixing an album). When we had our 2nd EP mastered, the guy had it done in a day"

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