For those of you that don't know, I've been an AoN fan since, well, probably 1984.
Somewhere along the line, I had a live performance on one of my old cassettes. I figured at the time that it would be too much effort to do their studio magic on stage - so, I figured they faked the live sounding bits. (Kiss did it for parts of their first live album, why not AoN?)
One night, sitting behind the counter at the computer lab in college, well after midnight, I was cruising around this new fangled thing called the World Wide Web. (Actually, now that I think about it, I may have been using Gopher space - one of the Web's precursors, but I digress.)
Anyway, I found a bunch of pictures of Art of Noise at a live show. Then I found a bunch more, and then even more. Turns out that AoN is quite a popular live act.
What I love is that they had more people on the stage in this video than an Earth, Wind & Fire with the Commodores jam session - all to reproduce what two synth bangers do in the studio.
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For those of you that don't know, I've been an AoN fan since, well, probably 1984.
Somewhere along the line, I had a live performance on one of my old cassettes. I figured at the time that it would be too much effort to do their studio magic on stage - so, I figured they faked the live sounding bits. (Kiss did it for parts of their first live album, why not AoN?)
One night, sitting behind the counter at the computer lab in college, well after midnight, I was cruising around this new fangled thing called the World Wide Web. (Actually, now that I think about it, I may have been using Gopher space - one of the Web's precursors, but I digress.)
Anyway, I found a bunch of pictures of Art of Noise at a live show. Then I found a bunch more, and then even more. Turns out that AoN is quite a popular live act.
What I love is that they had more people on the stage in this video than an Earth, Wind & Fire with the Commodores jam session - all to reproduce what two synth bangers do in the studio.
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