Brubeck's 'Time Out' listeners


Been tweaking my system (mostly room and rack) and heard something for the first time.

On the 'Take Five' track, when Joe Morello goes into his drum solo, am I hearing a reflection off of Eugene Wright's bass? It's right were Wright is playing. It's ever so delayed, but *there.*

Yikes!

I never would have thought my system (with tweaks suggested by you guys) could resolve something like that.

To those who are familiar with the recording (20 bit remaster) let me know!
mprime
Ya, Brubeck farted a lot, but always on key! That's why most people don't know about it and so few systems are able to pick it up.

It's a wonderful sensation when a simple tweek allows you to smell a familiar recordiing like it was just cut...

Ahh, we're just kidding!
While attending U of Illinois, Chicago I observed the following in a mensroom stall of the arts building:
"you know you're a musician when you can fart in major thirds"...
Mprime or Mbhcid-could you give the exact timing of this effect please.
Thanks...
Ben, thanks for responding. While I appreciate a good fart joke, and do feel this hobby can push you into utter absurdity, I would like to go through this with another member of the forum.

Anyway, the particular spot begins in Track 3, 'Take Five,' @ 2:37 and through 4:20 when Desmond reenters the mix. My 2:37 mark in the recording begins with the other players pulling back and Morello entering with a drum roll up followed by a hard thwak. Ever so slightly later, from the just right of center position, there's a reflection. Right where Wright is playing. This effect continues for minutes, to varing degrees, with a final pronounced reflection @ 4:18 just before Desmond reenters.

If this is what I think it is, then I find it amazing. While it is a reflection of *some* sort, to have it come of the bass is significant to me. For I have grown up in a family of muscians, have many as friends, and frankly, when I listen to them live, I find there to be so many secondary acoustic effects that it can be a bit much to listen to critically; I simply become overloaded with information and must focus on a particular player to keep from being distracted. That my system could picking up a second order effect of this magnitude is amazing.

So, Ben, thanks for your thoughts. And Mbhcid, if you listen critically to this, could you tell me if it is a tape splice or something else?

Best to all (particularly to Tarsando and company for the good laugh :)
I just replayed my 20 bit recording of Take Five listening for the "reflection" you describe. I heard only kick drum thwacks at 2:37 and again at 4:18 - neither of these relate to the tape splice i'm referring to which occurs at 1:50 following Desmond's solo, and just before the start of Morello's solo.