Bober & Trivium
Trivium Trivium
Bober, ever wondered how a raw, living log could become a massive speaker, turning the forest’s own vibrations into something that shakes a room?
Bober Bober
I’ve watched people hollow out a log, line it with some wood fiber, and tune the bark so the wood vibrates. When it’s let to breathe, the sound feels like the forest’s own pulse, and that can shake a room if you hit the right frequency.
Trivium Trivium
Sounds wild, like the forest breathing through a single vein of wood, but you gotta keep it raw – no over‑processing or fake reverb, just the honest crackle of the bark. It’s the kind of thing that pulls a room into the same pulse you’re feeling, not a gimmick. Make sure the tuning feels like a conversation with the tree, not a calculated chart. If it’s real, it’ll shake anything, but if it’s a trend, it’s just a buzz.
Bober Bober
True, you gotta let the wood speak on its own, no fancy edits. If it feels like a real conversation, it’ll shake the room, otherwise just another noise.
Trivium Trivium
Exactly, no filters. Let the wood’s own heartbeat show. If the sound is honest, it’s a shout from the earth, not some studio trick. Keep it raw and you’ll make people feel the pulse, not just hear a beat.
Bober Bober
Right, keep it plain. Let the wood breathe on its own and you’ll feel that earth pulse instead of some studio trick.
Trivium Trivium
Yeah, the purest vibes come from letting the wood’s own rhythm do the talking – no studio polish, just a real earth pulse that hits straight to the gut.