Check out the bass in ‘Walk Like an Egyptian’, dirty as a hobo. Also features the best rendition of ‘My Sharona’, and the brilliant original ‘Diamond Dolls’.
This post kinda continues the theme from yesterday.
This dooms.
The band have arguably made some of their best material during the time when most of them were on heroin, even if just on and off, the band’s future was very precarious, and they turned to songs of their childhood years to both fulfill contractual obligation and get some spiritual jolt from the stupor. It’s no coincidence that most of the songs chosen are originally either bright and optimistic, or have wistful melancholy to them — in the time when many of Chipmunks’ peers preferred grungy sound to counter the eighties’ excess. This diversion and infusion of nostalgia for youthful cheer might’ve been what saved the band and let them continue their legacy, perhaps even giving the members some renewed appreciation of life.
I came across this years ago and I still listen to it from time to time. Diamond Dolls fuckin slaps.
This is legit a great album.
Absolute fav. Vaporwave kinda vibes
Yooo this is nostalgic af! I would listen to this tripping off my ASS back when that video dropped. Like a golden age of edits and musical experimentation. So much good synthwave too.
Fun fact: the original Vol. 1 and 2 were made by a dude who had an actual turntable with a ‘16 rpm’ setting. It wasn’t slowed down digitally.
Though using about the same trick works well with some other records, as I mentioned in the post from yesterday: particularly fast idm or edm. VLC’s realtime speed adjustment is alright (with the pitch correction disabled), and from command-line tools
soxproduced best sound for me, whileffmpeg’s output was rather poor. Idk about Audacity.Wow, that’s wild! My dad has a turntable similar, need to badger him to get it out of storage
TBF ½ slowdown is an extreme case. I’m mostly using the speed of around 0.7-0.8.
DJ turntables allow variable speed, afaik — which was employed back in the eighties to turn techno into slower and sexier Belgian new-beat. But they aren’t quite consumer-grade devices, of course.




