Steve Smith from Journey-How many people knew that this man is an unbelievable virtuoso in fusion? The groove is tremendous, Steve manages to lay it down and do all the fancy stuff without sounding busy. Almost like Ginger Baker to the 10th power at his best with Vinnie Coliuta behind him holding down the groove. Victor Wooten-What planet did this guy come from? Sort of a Marcus Miller on steroids, Victor's style is extremely in the pocket with solos like a ravenous keyboard player-Maybe someone you might call "The bass players Bassist." Scott Henderson-The Monster.A little bit of Jeff Beck, a little bit of Stevie Ray Vaughn, a little bit of Joe Zawinul Jimi Hendrix and Frank Zappa all mixed up into one. Scott's style is flawless. He gets his ideas across with a "Joie de Vieve" kind of freshness coupled with attack of the relentless monster guitar player you can't stop listening to. The writing of the tunes has definitely been built around each one of their virtuosity. They flow, they are melodic, and they chase each other around the bandstand even better than John McLaughlin with Billy Cobham in the old Mahavishnu days.
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а в каком это битрейте?follow said:The Very Best of Glenn Miller
It's 192k stereo. More than enough for recordings from that period.Gata said:а в каком это битрейте?follow said:The Very Best of Glenn Miller
Sighfloyd750 said:BTW, from what I can make out (though I haven't checked all of them yet), this is real Glenn Miller. In fact, songs sound identical to the ones on the Essential Glenn Miller album which was recorded 1939-1944 i.e. before he was killed in WWII.