Is this the same album with "Misty Roses?" That's a great song. This is the third song I have heard from their Liberty era. The harmonies seem to have in common resonating with the third voice, and less spreading of the voices. So it sounds dry and warm, which was the direction audio production was heading in those days. Wet reverb and echo were becoming less prevalent. Not a criticism by any means, just noting the differences.
Thanks for posting this! I wasn't aware that the Four Freshmen sang this. Harmony Grass sang this piece, and I think the voice parts were identical. It was another excellent recording.
I agree, johnnylounge100. The Freshmen's singing was much cleaner and smoother on Today Is Tomorrow than on ATKOT. Overall, I like the sound they achieved on their Liberty albums - 4 Freshmen Pop! Also, wasn't it around this time that Comstock and Albers switched parts?
@jackadonia There was an album by them in a garage sale with a transitor radio on the cover too bad it was all scratched up
spacepatrolman 5 months ago
Is this the same album with "Misty Roses?" That's a great song. This is the third song I have heard from their Liberty era. The harmonies seem to have in common resonating with the third voice, and less spreading of the voices. So it sounds dry and warm, which was the direction audio production was heading in those days. Wet reverb and echo were becoming less prevalent. Not a criticism by any means, just noting the differences.
bennoach 6 months ago
Thanks for posting this! I wasn't aware that the Four Freshmen sang this. Harmony Grass sang this piece, and I think the voice parts were identical. It was another excellent recording.
thelonearranger1 7 months ago
I agree, johnnylounge100. The Freshmen's singing was much cleaner and smoother on Today Is Tomorrow than on ATKOT. Overall, I like the sound they achieved on their Liberty albums - 4 Freshmen Pop! Also, wasn't it around this time that Comstock and Albers switched parts?
jackadonia 1 year ago