“We did the album thinking, ‘This is the last record we’re ever gonna do, let’s go out in a blaze of glory,’” Wayne said, and the group camped out in Fredonia for three months during the summer of 1989. It finally had the time, the money, and the willing co-conspirators to craft its version of a psychedelic-rock classic such as Revolver by the Beatles or The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd. “Fridmann was working with all of these guys who wanted to be engineers, and we’d just give them challenges,” Wayne said. “We’d ask, ‘Could you set up an amp and a mike sixty feet down the hall?’ And they’d say, ‘Sure!’”
via blogs.vocalo.org
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