Bob, I couldn't disagree more. When I listened to it Friday night - start to finish, both discs - I listened not only in the dark (candlelight, Kate), but with headphones on. I was struck by the sound of her breathing in, found it painful to listen to. Don't get me wrong, I love her voice, don't fault the range, love the warmth and what she is doing with it, but I struggled for air when I listened to the way she sucked in the oxygen. My solution was to promise myself NOT to listen on headphones again.
Will you eliminate the wheeze/rattle that this here middle-aged woman has when sucking in air while recording her voice-mail message at work, please? Thank you. Maggie > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2002 12:50 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Joni never inhaled > > > Has anyone else noticed that all the breaths (inhalations) > have been deleted > from T'log? As an advertising copywriter, this is something > I've done many > times while mixing final voice for mostly older actors or > voice-over talent > who sort of wheeze or rattle during inhalation. I've never > noticed it having > been done in music, although I'm sure this isn't a first. > > Hack, hack. > > --Bob