Keith Richards of RS is known for drugs fueled colorful life. J. Depp based his famous cap'n Jack Sparrow character on this musician. That alone says a lot!
I look forward to hearing Haileys 2 in Warsaw in early November.
At first I thought that these look like ordinary speakers, but even those pictures from your link indicate that I couldn't be more wrong.
Agreed, that's a good start. To me it's also quite unescapable to see how his music evolved along with his age. Personally I like his current stuff, but everything he did I'd rate high and bits he did shooting heroin into his veins also. Artists, eho_O?
He's an oddball, but by the look of his on stage appearance and loads of energy still in him, and his work of course, he's a true artist to me. Plus, some very impressive things done with one gent from Queens of the Stone Age, changed my own attitude to Iggy big time. Enjoy:
Thanks. Also, not sure if folks here like Iggy, but his latest work, jolly on the surface, after several listens is kinda spooky and mildly depressing. All in all, brilliant nonetheless, just as the man himself is.
I can agree with that. The 'analytical' word I put in the 'bright' bag as you wrote. But come to think of it, neutral sound profile results in insight into music, which makes it... analytical indeed. That's a fair point.
Fair enough. That warmth I spoke of earlier also is to me associated with material of drivers in use; titanium vs textile domes, paper vs aluminium cones etc. Not sure about everyone else, but there's a pattern in there. Not in every case though, but frequently.
Warm sound would be to my ears heavy on bass, thick in general and with treble rolled off to have the whole thing in front of me rather stuffy than airy. Warm sound characteristic would be then the opposite of analytical approach.
Less and less beneficial for artists? Or is there any other reason? I've been a lurker on WBF but decided to ask because as much as I like Tidal, some things I enjoyed are now gone. :(