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Topic Closed70's sound and interpretation compared to today

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richardh View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 03:42
Originally posted by Anaon Anaon wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by Anaon Anaon wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

My argument was that nostalgia for a bygone era was overtaking an objective view of what is 'sterile' or not?
I can name 3 massive prog albums made in the seventies that sound sterile to me:
ELP - Pictures At An Exhibition
Pink Floyd - Dark Side Of The Moon
Genesis - Selling England By The Pound
 


I'm really curious to know why you find Dark Side Of The Moon sounding sterile, can you explain?

Thanks
Always found it one dimensional,flat and lacking any real oomph or warmth for that matter. I can just about get some enjoyment out of it by turning up the volume as loud as my ears can take it. Don't get me wrong I do love most of the songs and in general I like Floyd.However I listen to Wish You Were Here and wonder why DSOTM is so lacking by comparison.Just an opinion of course.


Sure, only opinion ;) I was asking because Dark Side Of The Moon is considered by many people as a very good example of 70's production model, thanks  to Alan Parsons work for example. I do prefer Wish You Were Here in terms of songs, but Dark Side Of The Moon can be considered as a reference in terms of sound.
Alan Parson's production was ground breaking and a reference point. I just don't like it!
 
The point I was desperately trying to get across was that the seventies saw a fast evolving scene in terms of production with more and more emhasis on mixing and less 'organic' warmth in the sound perhaps occurring even as early as 1971 with ELP- Pictures at an Exihibition.The idea that it all changed sometime around the 80/90's is way off the mark. But we are all progressive rock fans that love the seventies and the whole scene. However this blind nostalgia should not be getting in the way of understanding how music techniques have evolved or perhaps gone backwards in some peoples eyes. Nothing suddenly fell of the end of a cliff though!


Edited by richardh - August 30 2010 at 03:43
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 04:28
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Alan Parson's production was ground breaking and a reference point. I just don't like it!
 
The point I was desperately trying to get across was that the seventies saw a fast evolving scene in terms of production with more and more emhasis on mixing and less 'organic' warmth in the sound perhaps occurring even as early as 1971 with ELP- Pictures at an Exihibition.The idea that it all changed sometime around the 80/90's is way off the mark. But we are all progressive rock fans that love the seventies and the whole scene. However this blind nostalgia should not be getting in the way of understanding how music techniques have evolved or perhaps gone backwards in some peoples eyes. Nothing suddenly fell of the end of a cliff though!
ELP's Pictures at an Exhibition is a live album - it cannot represent evolution in production - it is more a reflection of the skill of Greg Lake in the post production and of Eddie Offord in the live mix and sound engineering.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 04:42
Originally posted by Rabid Rabid wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by mono mono wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:


ahem. I don't quite follow you. time reduces risks


Maybe "risk" wasn't adapted here, but your statement is still quite simplistic.
If you have more time, you can take more chances (maybe that word is better). Example: if you have 3 months for your recording instead of 1, you can afford to spend 2 weeks experimenting let's say a new recording technique for the drums...

you can do the same if you only have one day. it just becomes more risky. that's why I say "time reduces risks". try something new without knowing if it will work. if you have enough time to make it work there is no risk
 
Seconded.......you lose that spontaneous element, through having time to 'perfect' everything.  Smile
 


But then, you are critisizing the artist himself who doesn't know "how to use" his time in the studio...
Plus, I think that most of what you consider as 'spontaneous' is closer to an 'accident'... You cannot strive for spontaneity by simply reducing studio time to minimum, that's just irresponsable. See what I mean?
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richardh View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 09:31
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Alan Parson's production was ground breaking and a reference point. I just don't like it!
 
The point I was desperately trying to get across was that the seventies saw a fast evolving scene in terms of production with more and more emhasis on mixing and less 'organic' warmth in the sound perhaps occurring even as early as 1971 with ELP- Pictures at an Exihibition.The idea that it all changed sometime around the 80/90's is way off the mark. But we are all progressive rock fans that love the seventies and the whole scene. However this blind nostalgia should not be getting in the way of understanding how music techniques have evolved or perhaps gone backwards in some peoples eyes. Nothing suddenly fell of the end of a cliff though!
ELP's Pictures at an Exhibition is a live album - it cannot represent evolution in production - it is more a reflection of the skill of Greg Lake in the post production and of Eddie Offord in the live mix and sound engineering.
But the way its produced makes it sound not very 'live' to my ears. I've never really liked the sound on that album although many swear by it and regard it as great live album. I said earlier in the thread that I prefer the 1970 Lyeceum version that was recorded in mono about 3 months earlier.The difference betwen the two is very marked. That is the comparison I am making. I love the rough and ready version but the 1971 Newcastle city hall in general represents the future. Nice clean sound but a bit too clinical in my opinion.
btw Eddie Offord used the manor mobile didn't he? It was virtually mixed like a studio album although you probably no more about this than me.
btw2 I'm not criticising Eddie Offord. Trilogy and The Yes Album are two beautifully produced albums imo.
 
Also I'm not saying there was an evolution just saying there was a marked change that happened around that time for either the better or worse depending on your opinion. Again earlier in the thread I said that for some people (not me) the seventies represented a cynical time for rock music where recording techniques overtook the natural creative process.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 09:45
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by Anaon Anaon wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

My argument was that nostalgia for a bygone era was overtaking an objective view of what is 'sterile' or not?
I can name 3 massive prog albums made in the seventies that sound sterile to me:

ELP - Pictures At An Exhibition

Pink Floyd - Dark Side Of The Moon

Genesis - Selling England By The Pound

 
I'm really curious to know why you find Dark Side Of The Moon sounding sterile, can you explain? Thanks



Always found it one dimensional,flat and lacking any real oomph or warmth for that matter. I can just about get some enjoyment out of it by turning up the volume as loud as my ears can take it. Don't get me wrong I do love most of the songs and in general I like Floyd.However I listen to Wish You Were Here and wonder why DSOTM is so lacking by comparison.Just an opinion of course.


I think I know what you mean about DSOTM. Not too sure I would agree about SEBTP, but I'm going to stick my neck on the line here, and say DSOTM has more 'pop' production than rock..if that makes sense. I found Supertramp and the post Solar Fire albums by Manfred Manns Earth band to be the same. No criticism of the music, just the way it was presented.

Dave Hentschells work with Genesis also went this way after WAW, imo.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 30 2010 at 15:13
Originally posted by mono mono wrote:

Originally posted by Rabid Rabid wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by mono mono wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:


ahem. I don't quite follow you. time reduces risks


Maybe "risk" wasn't adapted here, but your statement is still quite simplistic.
If you have more time, you can take more chances (maybe that word is better). Example: if you have 3 months for your recording instead of 1, you can afford to spend 2 weeks experimenting let's say a new recording technique for the drums...

you can do the same if you only have one day. it just becomes more risky. that's why I say "time reduces risks". try something new without knowing if it will work. if you have enough time to make it work there is no risk
 
Seconded.......you lose that spontaneous element, through having time to 'perfect' everything.  Smile
 


But then, you are critisizing the artist himself who doesn't know "how to use" his time in the studio...
Plus, I think that most of what you consider as 'spontaneous' is closer to an 'accident'... You cannot strive for spontaneity by simply reducing studio time to minimum, that's just irresponsable. See what I mean?
 
I'm not  talking about 'striving for sponteneity'......I'm talking about only having enough time to do one take, as opposed to having enough time to perfect everything.
 
How does that criticize the artist??  By not having enough time ?
 
(btw, you do realize we're talking hypothetically, don't you?) 
 
I've got just one question......if you've got enough money to be able to afford 2 weeks of studio time experimenting with different recording techniques for the drums, can you lend me some, please?
 
Boracic Lint.  Unhappy
 
"...the thing IS, to put a motor in yourself..."
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mono View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 31 2010 at 05:03
I don't have that kind of money, but at least some artist do.

It's critisizing the artist because he CAN chose to do only one take, as he CAN chose to do perfect everything. A lot of artists today have that choice, so if they decide to perfect everything, it's their decision, that's why they would be blamed here...

If you don't have money, you're FORCED to do one take, and that is rarely what you really want...
https://soundcloud.com/why-music Prog trio, from ambiant to violence
https://soundcloud.com/m0n0-film Film music and production projects
https://soundcloud.com/fadisaliba (almost) everything else
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