British Columbia musician Rhys Fulber doesn’t remember every recording session in a career stretching back to the 1980s, but a day in the studio in 2001 sticks in his mind.
He recalled the privilege of working with the “transcendent” Sinead O’Connor. They were connected over more than 8,000 kilometres, he in Los Angeles and she in Dublin, as she recorded vocals for a track on Fulber’s debut solo album.
“You hear them through the speakers. You’re using the talkback microphone to communicate, so it’s a recording session, but they’re just not anywhere near you. They’re somewhere on the other side of the world, so just hearing her demeanour, a very soft-spoken,
→ Continue reading at CBC News