Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
Fremont Theater
San Luis Obispo, CA
April 1, 2016

Recorded & Tagged By OldNeumanntapr
4th Row, Left: Neumann AK-40s (ORTF in Hat) >LC3 >KM-100s >Beyer MV-100 >Sony PCM-M10 (24bit/44.1khz) >Audacity (16bit/44.1khz) FLAC

Post Production by Flying -M-
iZotope RX4 advanced > Har-Bal 3.0 > CD Wav > TLH

FLAC Tags Redone Via xACT 2.37 Due To Misspellings, And New FFP Files & Checksums Added.


Disc 1
01. Introduction by Corey from Good Medicine Presents
02. Zig Zaggity Woop Woop
03. Simple Songs
04. Digga Digga Do
05. The Jitters
06. [interlude] Scotty talks to the crowd
07. Save My Soul
08. Mr. Pinstripe Suit
09. Hey Now
10. Reefer Man


Disc 2
01. Minnie The Moocher
02. Jumpin' Jack
03. I Wan'na Be Like You
04. You Know You're Wrong
05. Big Time Operator
06. You Me And The Bottle Makes Three Tonight
07. Go Daddy-O
08. encore call
09. Why Me
10. So Long Fair Well Good Bye


Scotty Morris - lead vocals and guitar
Kurt Sodergren - drums and percussion
Dirk Shumaker - double bass and vocals
Andy Rowley - baritone saxophone and vocals
Glen "The Kid" Marhevka - trumpet
Karl Hunter - saxophones and clarinet
Joshua Levy - piano, arranger
Tony Bonsera - trumpet
Alex "Crazy Legs" Henderson - trombone

The Tipsy Gypsies Opened
The Historic Fremont (Movie) Theater Was Built In 1942


OldNeumanntapr Notes-
The show was awesome and we were 4th row on the left.
Everything went really well and I was able to set levels right on the money.
Genete, who is a Huge BBVD fan, took photos with her iPhone and actually got some pretty good results.
After the show she bought a poster and waited in line so all of the band could sign it.
She had a Great time and was really happy that she went.

I had thought that I would be directly in front of the left PA stack, but when we got into the theater I saw that they had hung the PA cabinets closer together than I would have imagined, so I was actually a little left and off axis from the left stack.
The opening band, which I didn't record (they were a local SLO County band) sounded like there was a bump in the frequency response.
Fortunately, BBVD sounded really good and there was no hint of that previous anomaly.

I only had One obnoxious clapper to my left, either behind me or further down my own row. (I made sure that Genete was quiet, no easy feat.) ;)

We were so close to the stage that I could hear the horns onstage as well as being amplified through the PA.
Fortunately we had really lucked out when we made or seating decisions, because we were on the left and so was the horn section!
The piano and stand up bass were on the right, and Scotty, the lead singer was in the center.

The last time I saw these guys was when they played a free show at the Paso Robles Mid-State Fair in 2001.
I had never heard of them but Genete was really into them and I remember being impressed with their sound.


Do NOT Convert To MP3.
Enjoy! Share freely, don�t sell, play nice, don�t run with scissors, etc. ;)

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mikes notes:
never heard this band before, wow.
A very nice sounding recording and I found the guy you wanted "erased".
His hand was cupped creating a very loud finger snapping sound.
Verses a more petite slapping of 4 fingers on a palm which makes more of a tick (try it yourself).

Kind of addictive once you get used to hearing your tapes without loud claps.
If it only didn't take sooooo long to do.
As normal when I went back the third time I found even more of that guy.
I wonder how many times an enthusiastic clapper "claps' during an hour and a half concert?
Well that's how many repairs this has, times maybe 2 (to include other neighbors).

Har-Bal uses an interesting form of equalization called harmonic balancing.
The theory is to balance the power across the frequency spectrum and you get additional clarity.
OK I am real new at this and it is not a simple procedure to get it right.
You might enjoy the added shimmer and increased volume.
The hidden music buried in the quiet spots are louder now adding more detail.
No limiting but more like riding the volume knob up and down.
So the quiet places are not as quiet.
An old studio trick.