
We went into the vault and found lots of outtakes, and Joe said, 'What about these?' And I said, 'Fine. So it's a two-LP set and there's a vinyl with it and lots of outtakes that nobody's ever heard of before. And being Ronnie's 80th birthday, we wanted to bring something out to celebrate it.

I think he did an absolutely amazing job with it. It's just to make it a little bit different and to bring it up to today's standards.' And so he did it, and I'm very pleased. And he was quite reluctant in the beginning to do it because he said, 'Oh, I can't improve on what Ronnie did.' And I said, 'Well, it's not really to improve on it. So we picked Joe Barresi, who's done lots of stuff with TOOL and QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE and so on. And I went through lots of different producers and thinking who would make a good job of it for Ronnie and bring it a bit more modern. Two months ago, Ronnie's wife and longtime manager Wendy Dio told Rob Rush Radio about the reasoning behind "Holy Diver: Super Deluxe Edition": "We were just - Rhino and myself - were thinking that it would be nice to re-release it with a newly remixed version. I mean, it sounds good, but if you're used to the other sound, it sounds a little different." So that's the way we mixed it, and now you bring it up to the new technology and things are done differently. plug-ins now, but it still sounds different. So even Joe mentioned that he couldn't really get some of the… Like that EMT, they don't use it anymore. We didn't put it on an auto-mix and the computer remembered the mix and then you can just keep mix to that. 'Okay, you pull those faders down a little bit when this part comes up.' ' Angelo, you put the guitar solo up.' ' Ronnie, you do the keyboard' - whatever was in there. So when we mixed it, it was Ronnie, Angelo, me or Viv or whoever was in the studio.

And that was on, and it gave the drums some ambience. There was some red thing we had - I forgot what it was called - we put on the drums, an EMT thing. And the problem with the remix, too, is when we mixed that album, there were not really any computers in the studio. I think even Joe was nervous with touching this classic thing. So when you're gonna take up that task of trying to remix something like that, that's risky. The mix is incredible on those albums - all the ZEPPELIN albums. And the drums are recorded great on that Page's guitars and the mix - fantastic. "You're used to hearing an album like 'Led Zeppelin I'," he continued. And I think it might sound a little bit drier, maybe a slightly different sound to the album. I heard a little bit of the remix… I'm almost afraid to listen to it because the sounds on there sound great - the drums sound great. Speaking to "The Rock Is George" podcast about the decision to remix "Holy Diver", original DIO drummer Vinny Appice said (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): "When you mess with something that is a classic, you're taking a chance that, is this gonna be better or is this gonna be different? The remastered, I heard some of that, and that sounds pretty good. The Super Deluxe Edition also features unreleased live performances and outtakes, along with a selection of rarities from the era.

The second is a newly remastered version of the original 1983 mix. He used the original analog tapes to remix all nine tracks on the album. The first is a new mix of the album made by Joe Barresi ( TOOL, QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE, SLIPKNOT). The four-CD boxed set comes with two versions of "Holy Diver". DIO's classic debut album, 1983's "Holy Diver", was reissued last month as "Holy Diver: Super Deluxe Edition" via Rhino. “Red Lobster CEO Kim Lopdrup Announces Retirement Plans.” Nation’s Restaurant News, 25 June 2021.

“Ellen DeGeneres Facebook Scam Promises $750 in Cash App,”, 17 Jan. “BBB Tip: Phishing Scams Can Come in Text Messages, Prize Offers,” Better Business Bureau,. They are often phishing scams that seek to illicitly collect personal information from victims.Ī spokesperson for Red Lobster confirmed in an email to Snopes that the offer is fake, and the company has been working with Facebook to get the posts removed. The account appears to generate an automatic response anytime someone posts a comment, urging them to complete the process of clicking, sharing, and commenting.Ī typical Facebook scam involves the perpetrators offering a deal that seems too good to be true, then urging viewers to click a link, comment, and share the scam post. Furthermore, the post isn’t being shared by official Red Lobster social media accounts - it’s being shared by an unofficial Facebook account called Red Lobster Fans that appears to have been created solely for the purpose of sharing the above post.
