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Bangles - "Be With You" |
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crapfromthepast ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 14 September 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 28 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 10 October 2007 at 6:21pm |
I have two different mixes of this song, and I'm not sure which one was the hit.
I have one on a Canadian compilation called Big Hits '89 (PolyTel Canada 840568 2, 1989), which should be the LP mix from the Bangles album Everything. All the other tracks on this compilation are LP versions, so that would make sense. I have another mix on the Bangles' Greatest Hits (Columbia 46125, 1990), which runs the same length - about 3:00 - but has the vocals mixed farther forward and omits the tambourine that's present on the LP mix. The Greatest Hits CD has a special "mixed by" credit for this one track. Odd that they would include a non-LP mix for this song and not for "Hero Takes A Fall", although the 45 mix for "Hero" turns up on Rhino's "Just Can't Get Enough" series. So which was the hit? Was there a promo CD for this song? Was the new mix done especially for Greatest Hits, or was this the single version from Everything? |
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eriejwg ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 June 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 46 |
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Had to listen to this track online on Napster as I don't have it ripped on my hard drive. Perhaps, Jim could shed some light on this one as the song didn't remotely sound familiar either way. Must have been one of their final charting hits according to the database.
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Roscoe ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 July 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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I didn't realize that was a different mix on Greatest Hits. I don't have the 45 of "Be With You", but it was played on the radio in my area at the time, and they played the LP version. Someone with the commercial 45 would need to weigh in on this.
Interestingly, Greatest Hits also contains a radically different mix of "I'll Set You Free", which never even charted and I never heard on the radio. In addition, Greatest Hits contains the 45 mix of "Walking Down Your Street", which I always liked much better than the LP version. |
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jimct ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 07 April 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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I have just sent eriejwg an mp3 of my promo CD single (CSK 1569), which features one track, and has both a listed & actual time of (3:01), for his analysis.
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eriejwg ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 June 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 46 |
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Jim: Thanks for the track to analyze!
After listening to "Be With You" from Jim's promo single, online to the track on Napster from Everything and We Are The 80's and Greatest Hits, I detected no difference in any of the versions. And, ya know what, I still don't remember the song! |
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NightAire ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 20 February 2010 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Quick question about "Hero Takes A Fall:"
I have both mixes, but am not sure which is the single mix. One has "wet," gated-reverb type drums and seems duller overall. The other has "dry," crisp drums, seems brighter in general, and is perhaps a drier mix overall as the vocals seem to stand out a bit more. Also, it sounds like there might have been a dynamics compressor used on this mix, as it has a "pop" and "slap" characteristic of analog single-band compressors. I'm suspecting the "dry" mix was the single mix; can anyone confirm? Edited by NightAire |
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The Hits Man ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 04 February 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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OK, I have both the "Everything" and greatest hits CDs.
I love this song, too. This is a digital multitrack recording that was mixed to analog. The "Everything" album came out in 1988, anf the Greatest Hits album just two years later. I compared the two songs and have concluded that they are the same mix. However, there are three possibilities for the difference in sound. 1. They used different tape generations, with the original album being sonically inferior. It sounds like it could be a bad tape copy to me. 2. The mastering is wildly different between the two. 3. It's a combination of both, which makes me desire a remastered "Everything" CD. |
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NightAire ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 20 February 2010 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Hits Man, are you referring to "Be With You" or "Hero Takes A Fall?"
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The Hits Man ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 04 February 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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topic of this thread. |
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MMathews ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 August 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Re: Be With You
I didn't remember this song either, so i just played it, great song! I was now curious to hear these two very different masters...so i compared the version from "Everything" and the one on "Greatest Hits". As Hits Man noted, it struck immediately how "flat" the album version sounds compared to the Greatest Hits copy which has more depth, clarity and less compression. Then i started noticing little details - and these 2 versions are indeed different mixes. Now, it's hard to a/b, but almost every track within the mix is placed ever so slightly differently, and uses different reverb. The drum track especially - the snares have different reverb, some backing vocals are placed differently; strings, guitars etc... ALL very subtle but once you hear them - you know. Here are a few places to help hear the differences: -First, just so we know the channels are not reversed, the drums start at :04, and both mixes have a "twirlly" synth effect that occurs in the right channel at :05. -At this point, notice the LP version has a "hi-hat" type percussion over to the right, at about 2 o'clock. This same hi-hat in the Greatest Hits is on the left, at about 10 o'clock. -At about :11 just before the vocal starts, on LP version, a low synth, a little like a mellotron, is turned up *before* she says "out my window". On the Greatest Hits version, that synth suddenly cuts in with her vocal, not before. -Also as soon as vocal comes in on LP, a loud electric guitar note is hit with every snare - the note is loud and almost in the center, at about 11 o'clock. But on Greatest Hits, this guitar is mixed hard right, at 3o'clock. -At about :30 sec in, there is a elec. guitar overdub as she sings "in the distance i hear a sound".... on the LP that guitar overdub starts on the right and pans left. But on Greatest Hits, it is mixed just off center to the right, and does not pan. -On the LP - there is a tambourine persent in the entire mix (mentioned by Ron in his first post). It is low, and in the dead center. But as the song progresses, they turn it up a bit. You can hear it more clearly in the 2nd verse, and 2nd chorus. Still having trouble hearing it? Check the drum rolls at 1:37, and 2:11. They smack the tambourine in the middle of those drum rolls. The tambourine is not present at all in the Greatest Hits mix. You get the picture... if you keep a/b-ing thru-out, you notice more little panning and level differences. So, either one of them is the 45 mix, OR the 45 was the same as the LP and they remixed it for the Greatest Hits album. If i have to chose a mix, hands down the Greatest Hits mix is sonically superior for me in every way. MM Edited by MMathews |
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