Korgscrew
Group: Super Admins
Posts: 3511
Joined: Dec. 1999 |
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Posted: Oct. 11 2000, 20:50 |
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You do wonder sometimes...
To tell the truth, I think that, certainly with Ommadawn, you would be able to hear that something funny was going on. Speeded up analogue tape makes things start to sound squeaky (because the pitch is raised at the same time)...a bit like the double speed guitar sounds in Tubular Bells...I suppose with distortion it could perhaps be hidden...I still don't think it would sound natural though (then people may claim that playing guitar that fast is not natural either). Amarok was done digitally...there are now some things that can change speed independently of pitch fairly naturally, but in 1990, that was not so possible...
Besides, I have more conclusive proof...I'm not a great one for learning solos and songs and things, but I had a little try at that Ommadawn solo and...it is possible. It's mostly a clever succession of hammer ons and pull offs, picking every third note (for those of you who know what I'm talking about...) - basically, he's not picking every note, instead relying on various factors so that he needs to move just the fingers on the left hand (instead of picking every note, where he'd be co-ordinating between the two hands). Playing it possibly involves some fairly heavy stretches, but with a short scale guitar (like his Gibson SG Junior that he was using a lot at the time...it might be another guitar though, I'll have to listen again) and some reasonably light strings (he used 009 gauge at the time, I believe, and still does as far as I know) along with practise, it is possible to play that. I believe Mike had been working on that for a while - there are similar runs in Hergest Ridge, just not played quite as well. The Amarok one...well, I haven't tried that one but, if he was as good as he was when he recorded Ommadawn, you can only expect him to be better with 15 years more practise
There's one in QE2 that seems ridiculous as well...it's using a similar technique. As for the fast riff intro to Amarok...practise makes perfect
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