Erotic Cakes Guthrie Govan
Erotic Cakes Guthrie Govan
Erotic Cakes Guthrie Govan
Erotic Cakes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Main page Erotic Cakes is the first solo studio album by guitarist Guthrie Govan. It
Erotic Cakes
Contents was first released in 2006 through Cornford Records and, it was later re-
Featured content released by JTC records in 2011.[2] The album features a mixture of
Current events songs that Govan had performed previously with his trio as well as some
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new compositions.
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Wikipedia store In an interview with All Out Guitar, he stated that, "these studio versions
are a lot closer to what I meant the stuff to sound like when I wrote it".[3]
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In the quote, he refers to the changes in arrangement made to the songs
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compared to his live work with his trio.
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Community portal Govan has stated that the album name is a reference to the Simpsons'
Recent changes episode "Treehouse of Horror VI".[4]
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Studio album by Guthrie Govan
Contents [hide]
Tools Released January 1, 2006[1]
1 Background
What links here Recorded Headroom studios, North Hollywood.
2 Recording
Related changes Genre Progressive Rock, Fusion, jazz rock,
3 Musical Style
Upload file instrumental rock
4 Track listing
Special pages Length 54:03
5 Personnel
Permanent link
6 References Label Cornford Records
Page information
Wikidata item Producer Jan Cyrka
Recording [edit]
The recording process took longer than expected originally. The drums were originally recorded in Pete Riley's old
studio. The guitars were recorded in Govan's house by running his amp through a Palmer speaker simulator. The band
intended to keep those tracks but, producer Jan Cyrka insisted that they should record the drums again, this time in a
better studio.[5] After they did that, the guitars that were recorded at Govan's home did not sound good enough by
comparison. It was then when Paul Cornford decided to fly the band to Hollywood in order to record the guitars in
Richie Kotzen's studio. This time, the guitars were recorded through mic'd loudspeakers in a wood room.[3] The result
were much better recorded guitar tracks than what was originally expected by Govan.
The album features Govan's ability to play multiple styles while keeping his own personal sound. Kevin Dawe refers to
the way Guthrie utilizes guitar layering to create "dense musical settings and backings".[8] He explains that Govan
achieves this through the use of heterophony, multi-layered harmonies, varied chord voicings and dynamic rhythmic
grooves. He also mentions how, in this album, Govan pushes the boundaries of guitar playing as well as exploring its
place in the studio.
Personnel [edit]
Main musicians[4]
Additional musicians[4]
References [edit]
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