No, I don't like Kimi ga Irukara (
the end vocal track).
Not exact matches
He doesn't get into bending the sound of his voice quite like Sanchez, but his tendency to head for the higher bits of his range, and add a little flair to the
end of his lines, shows an understanding of
vocals as an instrument in noise punk, and that makes this
track a little special.
And there's a clever twist with everyone involved singing along to the song on headphones, so you only hear their
vocal renditions of the
track until the actual tune gets pumped up toward the
end.
However, Tangerine Dream's American - release score for Legend has unquestionable merits — in particular the
ending track «Loved by the Sun» with its lead
vocal by Yes» Jon Anderson.
Bono's
vocals and The Edge's guitar strums were crisp and clear on U2's «Where the Streets Have No Name,» but the bass was underwhelming — so the
end result was that the
track sounded tinny.
When we listened to Coldplay's «Paradise,» activating Beats Audio did enhance the low
end and made the
track sound richer overall, but the bass competed with the
vocals more than we would have liked.
Simple music like acoustic or
vocal heavy
tracks sound great, but introduce a lot of additional instruments and that high -
end detail gets washed away in muddy bass response that can't exist in the same place.
I played the more bass - heavy «Drug Dealers Anonymous» to test my low -
end theory, and while Pusha T and Jay - Z's
vocals were crisp and acerbic on the
track, the bass was a more subtle player.