Prog Production Values Over The Years |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: December 24 2011 at 00:41 | ||||
Nice track! I remember this band from a few years back when I was really into metal. Lately, have been sampling the 2011 album of Unexpect and hope to acquire it sometime soon. But I'd already call what I heard of the Unexpect album as metal music for the 21st century - all the madness and pulverising force of 90s extreme metal but without its repetition and limited basket of influences.
Yeah, RJD is definitely one of my all time favourite singers! But not all melodic metal works as well not least because very few melodic metal singers can sing like Dio. I love Rainbow and the Dio Sabbath. Edited by rogerthat - December 24 2011 at 00:42 |
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7264 |
Posted: December 24 2011 at 01:23 | ||||
Thanks for your vote of confidence, Roger! I don't consider myself a metal connoisseur by any means, but "I know what I like!" That song sure has some energy! Poor RJD, what a loss! I saw his tour with his own band after Sabbath broke up, it was a great show! Geezer came onstage to jam with the encore, that was the beginning of the "Heaven & Hell" reunion. RIP Ronny! Anyway, Ronnie was a guy who could appreciate a good keyboard part integrated into metal, I miss that. Rock on & Merry Christmas!
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zumacraig
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 10 2011 Status: Offline Points: 1301 |
Posted: December 24 2011 at 08:01 | ||||
i def prefer vintage over digital any day. the straight synth leads, mellotron, rhodes and organ have definitely improved when it comes to the digital format. as for dream theater, the thing that keeps me coming back to them is the great songs and melodies that i just sing out loud with :) the icing on the cake is when there is a memorable guitar solo or jordan uses some vintage sounding patch.
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7264 |
Posted: December 24 2011 at 16:55 | ||||
Don't get me wrong, I really do love Dream Theater! Patrucci is probably the best guitarist alive right now, except for when Fripp decides to turn it on (rarely anymore). Jordan is quite amazing, hands-down one of the best! I've especially enjoyed their cover versions of other songs, and I once saw Patrucci and Howe onstage together, playing Yes tunes. Poor Steve looked very old and lost, compared to Patrucci! That being said, I think their engineering on their CDs is a bit sterile. I'd enjoy hearing Jordan wail on an old Hammond B3 with all of its clankiness, they are remarkably rich instruments! And, I'm not sure that he plays genuine Mellotron samples, those are a lot of fun! Happy Holidays, listen to good music & be joyful!
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BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: January 25 2008 Location: Wisconsin Status: Offline Points: 8191 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 10:56 | ||||
I've always disliked the gaited drums effect brought on (I've heard) by Phil Collins' rise to rock stardom. The return to more open spectrum and duration of the recording of drums has been 'music to my ears.' Seems a lot of recent bands have attempted some return to "old" sounds in their recordings (Djam Karet, Dungen, Ritual, Diagonal, Algernon, maudlin of the Well, Ciccada, Frogg Café, Samsara Blues Experiment, Wobbler, The Amazing are a few that come to mind). I like it.
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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zumacraig
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 10 2011 Status: Offline Points: 1301 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 11:08 | ||||
Don't get me wrong, I really do love Dream Theater! Patrucci is probably the best guitarist alive right now, except for when Fripp decides to turn it on (rarely anymore). Jordan is quite amazing, hands-down one of the best! I've especially enjoyed their cover versions of other songs, and I once saw Patrucci and Howe onstage together, playing Yes tunes. Poor Steve looked very old and lost, compared to Patrucci! That being said, I think their engineering on their CDs is a bit sterile. I'd enjoy hearing Jordan wail on an old Hammond B3 with all of its clankiness, they are remarkably rich instruments! And, I'm not sure that he plays genuine Mellotron samples, those are a lot of fun! Happy Holidays, listen to good music & be joyful! [/QUOTE]
agree on all points. recent DT albums have had no dynamics at all. just a wall of sound. i do wish there was some space between instruments like you said. also would to hear the bass higher in the mix. jordan on a B3 would be crazy!
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zumacraig
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 10 2011 Status: Offline Points: 1301 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 11:09 | ||||
Def Djam Karet. they even had great drum sounds in the 90s.
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Tapfret
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 12 2007 Location: Bryant, Wa Status: Offline Points: 8581 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 19:42 | ||||
The scope of production techniques and production values are a lot broader than the OP's thesis. Yes, in general terms amongst the artists with the most resources, the productions seem to be fairly generic. That is part of why I have so much appreciation for Pain of Salvation's Road Salt albums. They went out of their way to really flatten and dry out the sound. It really allowed the musical equation to be of more importance than the sound.
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zumacraig
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 10 2011 Status: Offline Points: 1301 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 19:56 | ||||
so which is it? you say my thesis is flawed then you agree with it in the next sentence. i would say that PoS' output is an example of that samey, 'clinical ' production discussed in this thread. put a PoS release up against 5 other main releases this year and they all sound the same. glad you can hear the differences.
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 20:26 | ||||
^^^ Given how scattered and fragmented the music scene of today is, that probably only reflects what YOU have personally heard and maybe you have also not heard all that many contemporary/modern albums, I don't know and can't comment on that. I like the way Radiohead and Dave Matthews Band produce their albums, though the latter can raise the level of drums in the mix a tad too much for my liking. I loved the way Josh Brion produced When the Pawn...for Fiona Apple. The Remember Shakti live album is just terrific. Electric Wizard is pretty raw and 'intentionally imperfect' too. These are all, as I am sure you've noticed, from different genres. I don't think your typical DT or SX release reflect contemporary production anymore than Yes or Genesis reflect the sound of 70s prog, which, in truth, is not a whole lot at all.
I also think some of us may be getting nostalgic for the sake of scratches and just flat out poor audio reproduction in the old recordings, which was probably unintentional. I am sure given a choice, most bands would want a clear and full sound. In my country, we got to hear clear recordings only in the 90s and we didn't necessarily miss the flaws of the old. I don't think those bands, other than EW, lack in dynamics and especially DMB even has a good deal of looseness and improvisation, so the clinical feeling you talk about is possibly also a compositional and performing choice. There are listeners and musicians today who do want very clinical-sounding albums. But not everybody is not on that bandwagon. |
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7264 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 20:33 | ||||
Well, I THOUGHT Auto-Tune had a place in prog! Hell, we INVENTED it! 2:10 in this classic (old age has its advantages, I saw this tour twice, amazing!!) |
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Tapfret
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 12 2007 Location: Bryant, Wa Status: Offline Points: 8581 |
Posted: December 25 2011 at 21:50 | ||||
You do not understand the difference between "general terms" and a specific example? I'll give you a hint: the concepts are not "samey". Nonetheless, if you can't hear the production differences between the Road Salt albums and any of the previous PoS albums, then little value will come of further discussion. |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28028 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 04:02 | ||||
This one needs explaing (well to me anyway)
Around the 2.10 mark you get the 'robot voice'
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harmonium.ro
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 18 2008 Location: Anna Calvi Status: Offline Points: 22989 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 13:23 | ||||
That is such a brilliant sounding album. Jon Brian is a great producer (his Eternal Sunshine OST is also fantastic). |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28028 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 14:37 | ||||
I think Rush were at their creative best through those albums you mention but production wise i consider those to be adequate and no more. Power Windows leaps out of the speakers like some possessed thing.
BTW I got it wrong about Peter Collins producing IQ's Are You Sitting Comfortably? , I got my Rush producers mixed up and it was in fact Terry Brown. I still like it though Edited by richardh - December 26 2011 at 14:37 |
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7264 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 15:30 | ||||
Yup, that was the early prototype of today's "Autotune" craze! You hear nearly the exact voice used for Motorola "Droid" smart phone ads. Similar approach....Emerson would speak into the mike mounted above his keyboards, and the software would modulate his voice, add effects & change the pitch automatically. 1974 technology ripped off by 2011 rap artists!! |
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thehallway
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 13 2010 Location: Dorset, England Status: Offline Points: 1433 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 16:39 | ||||
Vocoder? ^ |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 17:07 | ||||
Eh? What!!! "software" in 1974??? No - any hardware that used software would have filled a small room back in 1974. Karn Evil 9 used a Moog Vocoder - a completely electronic analogue device, and as such wasn't even new in 1974 - anyone old enough will remember Sparky's Magic Piano. Autotune is a different device using a different technology, in terms of product development there is no connection between a vocoder and Autotune, one is not the forerunner of the other.
Autotune can be used ot make robot vioces and weird pitch shifts and modulations in a vocal but that isn't its main use, it is designed for pitch correction and used properly most people won't even notice when it is being used.
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What?
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7264 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 17:39 | ||||
Don't need Autotune for pitch correction, engineers have corrected off-pitch vocals for years in the studio by modulating the speed of the tape. Madonna was notorious for her off-key studio work, and she required a LOT of tuning help long before Auto-Tune! My point is that, as a vocal enhancer, the AutoTune effects of ring modulator, flanger, and delay were employed by prog long before popular music. Emerson's vocal treatment are essentially similar to AutoTuned effects we hear all the time. Autotune just bundles them into one package. It is standard in Apple's "Garage Band" program. From Wikipedia: "Karn Evil 9" includes vocal credit for Keith Emerson, and is Emerson's
only official vocal credit on an ELP record. The only vocals he
contributed to the song were those of the voice of the mouse in the
Second Impression, which was sped up, and the computer voice in the
Third Impression. Emerson ran his voice through the Ring Modulator on
his Moog Modular to achieve this sound. Autotune just jazzes it up. We did it first, Hollywood just ripped it off. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 26 2011 at 18:26 | ||||
I never said they needed Autotune for pitch correction, I said that was what it was designed for - because modulating tape speed affects the pitch and timing (tempo) whereas Autotune does not - for example with Tammy Winette her singing was so flat they used to record her vocals, pitch correct by altering the tape speed which changed the timing so badly it didn't fit the backing music anymore so they then re-recorded the instrumentation to the new tempo.
But it's not essentially similar at all - the Moog Vocoder and the Ring Modulator produce different effects to Autotune - and we don't hear Autotune effects "all the time" - Autotune is used a lot but it is rarely used to create robotic effects because it's so cliched, even for Pop.
Yes, and no. The technology used in Autotune can also produce those effects because of how the algorhytm works, but it does not work the other way around - a vocoder, ring modulator and/or a flanger cannot be used for pitch-correction - the development of those effects did not lead to Autotune and Autotune was not created to emulate those effects. The main use of Autotune is pitch correction - hence its name.
(Bob Moog produced a vocoder long before Karn Evil #9, Walter Carlos used it in '71 so I assumed Emerson had one (or at least used it) - if he used the Moog's ring modulator instead then I assumed wrong - but that's still unrelated to Autotune.)
However - Prog didn't do it first - not by a long way - the BBC Radiophonic Workshop used ring modulators back in 1963, Hollywood used them before that in The Forbidden Planet (1956) - ring modulators (double-sideband suppressed carrier modulators) go back to the early days of radio in the 1930s, similarly vocoders were originally designed for telephony in the late 30s - there were several other electronic and electro-mechanical devices used to create robotic singing voices before Prog. Prog was no more the first use of vocoders than it was first use of the electric guitar, the mellotron or the synthesiser.
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What?
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