Jus now checking out Bill Israel. I don’t listen to Kodak so I was out of the loop that it had dropped but the fact it was released while in prison is what intrigued me to listen.
How in the f*** is the quality so clean? Phones can be snuck in to record vocals on, but obviously the quality would take a hit and this straight up sounds like it was recorded in a studio. Ain’t no way in hell he had a full blown condenser mic and audio interface in that b**** lmao.
On Bobby’s short verse on Stoopid, it was clearly phoned in over a prison telephone.
they’re recorded before prison..
they’re recorded before prison..
He was in prison for a hot minute tho. It jus came out in November. Why would they have waited that long to release it? The mixing and mastering definitely didn’t take that long.
He was in prison for a hot minute tho. It jus came out in November. Why would they have waited that long to release it? The mixing and mastering definitely didn’t take that long.
production & sample clearances usually take a while, plus there’s strategy involved in selecting release dates
soup can and string
production & sample clearances usually take a while, plus there’s strategy involved in selecting release dates
I know about sample clearance but I didn’t think it took that long damn.
A while back, I also saw that some prisons were looking into possibly adding music as inmate’s recreational time. (Although that would prolly only be acoustic guitars and s*** lbs.) I don’t have the direct link at the moment. But I thought maybe he was at a prison that implemented that, especially being a high profile inmate.
S***s crazy I heard it on the radio a couple months back. The telecom business that partners with that county jail made bank of Drakeos frequent calls
Bobby Beausoleil's Lucifer's Rising soundtrack was made in prison. Jimmy Page was supposed to do the soundtrack but dropped out
"Beausoleil suggested that he should compose the soundtrack for Lucifer Rising, as the two had originally agreed a decade earlier. He told Anger that be believed he could obtain approval from the prison administration to record his compositions within the institution."
"Beausoleil formed the Freedom Orchestra with fellow inmates, and recorded the album in the prison using instruments built in the prison handicraft shop."