Cette semaine, Red Led et Los Teignos continuent d’explorer le bundle V-Collection 5 d’Arturia et s’attardent sur le nouveau synthé virtuel Synclavier V, émulant le premier et l’un des plus fameux synthétiseurs numériques de l’histoire.

Cette semaine, Red Led et Los Teignos continuent d’explorer le bundle V-Collection 5 d’Arturia et s’attardent sur le nouveau synthé virtuel Synclavier V, émulant le premier et l’un des plus fameux synthétiseurs numériques de l’histoire.
Because drummer Stewart Copeland had broken his collarbone and was unable to drum, he opted to use his Fairlight CMI to program the drum track for the single. While singer/bassist Sting pushed to use the drums on his Synclavier instead, the group's engineer found the Synclavier's programming interface difficult—and it ended up taking him two days to complete the task. Copeland ultimately finished the drum programming and claimed that the Fairlight's then-legendary "Page R" (the device's sequencing page) saved his life and put him on the map as a composer. In a Qantas inflight radio program named "Reeling in the Years", Copeland was quoted as saying that the argument over Synclavier versus Fairlight drums was "the straw that broke the camel's back," and that this led to the group's unravelling.
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