my guess
"Happy Days" by "PJ"/maybe "U don't know me" armand van helden
(but i reeely think PJ)
was the first song ( happened to be dance : )
which successfully use the reverb, to have a song
fade its own lyrics; drive the bass steady, and
bring the music/song/vocals, * back ! *
i heard "hey baby"/no doubt (on xm-top40,station)*not a pop-remix
"pull it off"...having gwen, say the first line, on the verse,
and...then, have it 'reverb' until the beats, caught up, and it
ties nicely into the chorus....
>when done, *properly* it sounds FUN, cool, and like it was meant to be!
can we honor DANCE-music with this (uncredited) source of what
is an over-saturated parade of pop music doing this?
i think so, and does any one object to giving it to
Pj "happy days?"
"Happy Days" by "PJ"/maybe "U don't know me" armand van helden
(but i reeely think PJ)
was the first song ( happened to be dance : )
which successfully use the reverb, to have a song
fade its own lyrics; drive the bass steady, and
bring the music/song/vocals, * back ! *
i heard "hey baby"/no doubt (on xm-top40,station)*not a pop-remix
"pull it off"...having gwen, say the first line, on the verse,
and...then, have it 'reverb' until the beats, caught up, and it
ties nicely into the chorus....
>when done, *properly* it sounds FUN, cool, and like it was meant to be!
can we honor DANCE-music with this (uncredited) source of what
is an over-saturated parade of pop music doing this?
i think so, and does any one object to giving it to
Pj "happy days?"