Tonight's mystery artist have a hit on which conversations with and by their producer can be heard .  Can you guess the song, band or producer??

I found the info about this on Wikepidia's page for Lynyrd Skynyrd’s 'Sweet Home Alabama'. Now I think is pretty common knowledge that when we hear the famous "Turn it up" line uttered by Ronnie Van Zant at the beginning was actually not intended to be in the song. Van Zant was simply asking producer Al Kooper  and engineer Rodney Mills to increase the volume in his headphones so that he could hear the track better. However it goes on to add that is not the only bit that was done or left in by Kooper it says:

There is a semi-hidden vocal line in the second verse after the line "Well, I heard Mr. Young sing about her". In the left channel, you can hear the phrase "Southern Man" being sung lightly (approximately at 0:55). This was producer Al Kooper doing a Neil Young impression and was just another incident of the band members amusing themselves in the studio while being recorded. According to Leon Wilkeson, it was Kooper's idea to continue and echo the lines from "Southern Man" after each of Van Zant's lines. "Better...keep your head"..."Don't forget what your / good book says", etc. But Van Zant insisted that Kooper remove it, not wanting to plagiarize or upset Young.] Kooper left the one line barely audible in the left channel.

Also  following the two "woos" (Wilkeson's, the first; King's, the second) at the start of the piano solo (at approximately 4:08), Van Zant can be heard ad-libbing "My, Montgomery's got the answer." The duplicate "my" was produced by Kooper turning off one of the two vocal takes. The count-in heard in the beginning of the track is spoken by King. The count-in to the first song on an album was a signature touch that producer Kooper usually put on albums that he made.

Here it is performed live:

 

More From WWMJ Ellsworth Maine