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rogerthat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 06:10
Yeah, I do love that track.  I have always wanted to find out more about what all she sang but she seems to have sung more often for Oldfield and I never really got into his work for some reason.  


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 06:44
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Originally posted by Star_Song_Age_Less Star_Song_Age_Less wrote:

Originally posted by Kati Kati wrote:

drum machine? I doubt that Phil Collins who is foremost a brilliant drummer would be content with anything not real sounding like a drum machine. Confused  


And yet, he was. Smile  "Duke was the real transition from their 1970s progressive rock sound to the 1980s pop era.<sup id="cite_ref-mojo07_28-2" ="reference">[URL=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_%28band%29#cite_note-mojo07-28" rel="nofollow]<span>[</span>28<span>]</span>[/URL]
The use of a drum machine became a consistent element on subsequent
Genesis albums, as well as on Collins's solo releases. The first Genesis
song to feature a drum machine was the Duke track "Duchess". The more commercial Duke was well received by the mainstream media, and was the band's first UK number one album, while the tracks "Misunderstanding" and "Turn It On Again" became live performance favourites. The drum machine Roland CR-78 that Collins used to make the sound effects on Duke, his first solo album Face Value, and the Brand X song "Wall to Wall" was also used on Phillips' album 1984 in 1981."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_%28band%29

Phil Collins is a good drummer, but the repetitive nature of the drum machine altered Genesis' music, and not in a way that I like.  Don't get me wrong, I still find some of the stuff catchy, I just don't put it in the same category.

And now the topic is way off the rails.


This drum machine thing is perhaps the main reason I like many of the 80's Genesis songs better live. They sound less plastic, more alive, and the drumming is perhaps the main reason for that (actually I also often like 70's live Genesis better than studio, but that's not because of the drum machine, certainly).
That's naughty, 20 min time out to Phil Big smileHug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 06:45
Originally posted by siLLy puPPy siLLy puPPy wrote:

Freddie Mercury of course Beer
awwww you cute siLLy puppy, I loved and love Freddie too, big hug to youSmileHug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 06:46
Originally posted by Tom Ozric Tom Ozric wrote:

^ No, it was 6:00 and time for tea .....
And it's so hot and humid here, and after a day's slavery.......
tea and crumpets, yes yay! Big smileHug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 06:57
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Yeah, I do love that track.  I have always wanted to find out more about what all she sang but she seems to have sung more often for Oldfield and I never really got into his work for some reason.  


A track from one of her solo albums that displays her vocal range is also one of my favourites by her:


 
She also vocalised on Pekka Pohjola's third solo album, Keesojen Lehto (aka Mathematician's Air Display) - Mike also contribute a lot of guitar to that album but not in his typical style of playing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 07:18
Wow, sounds very different there though the track is not really my cuppa.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2014 at 23:17
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I think for sometime, the emphasis has been on keeping out mistakes and this seems to include even minor imperfections that were left on record earlier.  To be sure, the constraints of analog made it difficult to airbrush recordings to the same extent earlier; else singers may have gotten their recordings cleaned up even then.  

The other sweeping trend is in the delivery of the words itself in a very flat and flavourless (but polished and flawless) accent.  This is across the board.  It's the same in my country.  Either artists have forgotten the importance of cultural nuances in endearing their work to the audience and giving it personality or they do it because they are afraid of how the audience would react.  In the 70s, you had such a wide variety of English accents.  Lake almost seemed to imitate American accents.  Gabriel was very English. So was Jon Anderson but he brought a different accent and likewise Ian Anderson.  Ozzy sounded absolutely nothing like Gillan.  These folks were all experimenting and trying to arrive at what each perhaps thought would be the perfect vocal style.  Over a period of time, it seems as if artists have already made up their mind about what would be a perfect style and just reproduce it.  Many of them with assembly line uniformity.   You have an interesting point that maybe with so many female singers in pop, this uniformity breeds a general dislike of female singers.  A parallel I can immediately think of is women's tennis.  They all seem to play from the same coaching manual.  Well, not all, but only discerning fans today would be aware of which ones play differently whereas earlier the difference between Graf, Pierce, Sanchez-Vicario, Hingis was more readily apparent.  

Another point is time tends to cast a shroud over unremarkable artists or unremarkable works of art and spotlights the more unique ones for future generations.  Maybe our time will look very different with the benefit of hindsight, it's hard to tell.  I remember sampling non-Carpenters versions of Won't Last A Day Without You.  Man, they sounded annoyingly uniform and I could totally see why the Carpenters cover has stood the test of time.  

But something has changed about just the way vocals are treated in the studio with a result that is not particularly agreeable to my taste.  Often times, the vocals sound better in the live performance of the same track so I wonder if it's just over compression, cutting out the subtle dynamic variations that make a performance lively and human.

The polished voice seems to be more or less American in sound, you're right about the cultural nuances or introduction of accents. Certainly here in Australia, the majority of bands and singers sing with an American accent, or at least somewhere in the mid-Pacific. Of course, that's as much a part of the tendency of modern Australian musicians not wanting to have any kind of association with their country, rather seeing the local scene as a way to get overseas so they can disown their Australianness... well, except in hip hop.

On the last point, the treatment at the mixing desk, unifying with eq, compression, autotune and so on, certainly is part and parcel of this whole 'polished voice' deal, enhancing these qualities even more, but I'd still argue it's a consistent and real thing outside of the recording booth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 01:09
Interesting point about disowning cultural roots.  That is very much the case in India too.  Our current most celebrated composer A R Rahman is completely sold on the concept of 'one global music'.  And if that involves streamlining sounds to the point where the only Indian element left in the music is the language, so be it, apparently.  Even the pronunciation of Indian words is done in an anglicized, 'modern' way to fit these global hues.  Colour me cynical but to me, this just amounts to a boring uniformity and homogeneity in mainstream music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 02:16
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Interesting point about disowning cultural roots.  That is very much the case in India too.  Our current most celebrated composer A R Rahman is completely sold on the concept of 'one global music'.  And if that involves streamlining sounds to the point where the only Indian element left in the music is the language, so be it, apparently.  Even the pronunciation of Indian words is done in an anglicized, 'modern' way to fit these global hues.  Colour me cynical but to me, this just amounts to a boring uniformity and homogeneity in mainstream music.
In western music this is not a modern thing. Trained singers are taught the vocal elocution of diction, phrasing and projection and that results in a standardisation of vocal style that is devoid of any regional accent - for example both Katherine Jenkins and Charlotte Church speak with a strong Welsh brogue but sing without an accent. Uniformity in classical music is by design. This homogenisation of classical singing extended to popular singing well into the 20th century until the advent of Rock'n'Roll. British regional accents started to appear in popular music but were seen more as a novelty (George Formby, Gracie Fields, Tommy Steel, etc), most British pop singers would ape an America accent for Rock'n'Roll and R&B (while the Beatles maintained British pronunciation for some words, their spoken Liverpudlian accents were Americanised when they sang - Mick Jagger's singing accent is a bizarre blend of Southern American accents, none of them natural). The opposite was true in folk-music where rationality was emphasised and often exaggerated to the point of caricature - in folk clubs of the 1970s it was not unusual to hear a song sung in a heavy Northumberland accent to then hear the singer speak in a posh Public School accent. [Which is not quite as weird as hearing a Black Metal singer introduce a song in a thick Birmingham accent... though that is nowhere near as funny as having the singer do the introductions in his shrieking demon voice]. I believe that it is the infusion of Folk music into Pop that led to the acceptance of non-American accents (Syd Barrett, David Bowie, Peter Gabriel, Ian Anderson, etc.) and I suspect that late-60s singers like Roger Chapman that led the way.

Now I think we've gone full-circle - but it is vocal training and coaching that is responsible for "rounding the edges" of regional accents, (this is very evident on tv reality programmes like The Voice and X-Factor), not modern production techniques.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 02:30
Absolutely, production cannot change an accent.  I was referring more to over-compression and removing even slight mistakes from a recording, which, when combined with homogenised accents, can create a very polished but unnatural effect.  

I agree that classical music itself emphasises uniformity of accent.  However, classical music did (and probably still does, though I have read articles to the contrary) emphasise bringing out the pure tone of the singer rather than pushing it into a certain zone of acceptability.  So Maria Callas sounded very different from Renata Tebaldi even though they were contemporaries.  What we are seeing in popular music is a certain range (namely the tenor to mezzo) is already established as the preferred range in which singers ought to sing.  If to this are added uniform accents and recording techniques that emphasise perfection, it makes the product even more uniform.  One can experience the actual dynamics of a classical singer's voice in the recital because it is not further amplified and only relies on the acoustics of the room.  That is not the case in rock/pop singing.  Even so, as I said, one can experience a more 'alive' reproduction of the song in live concerts but no room is left for that apparently in the studio.  

I agree with your citing programes like Voice as compounding the issue.  It was interesting to watch singers like Danica Shirey and Luke Wade, who were both technically quite accomplished, struggle with songs that did not allow them to indulge in flamboyant pyrotechnics and demanded them to project more vulnerability.  They couldn't really handle that, imo (which is probably why they got eliminated as their coach continued to push songs that didn't play to their strengths).  It was quite painful to listen to Danica take a sledgehammer to Joni Mitchell's Help Me.  Luke likewise completely missed the point of Holding Back The Years.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 02:47
I have to admit that if I ever watch those programmes it is only during the first few episodes - once they've eliminated the idiosyncratic and characterful singers my interest wanes. Certainly on The Voice I'm more interested in those singers who don't get chosen, such as Harriet Whitehead whose version of 4 Non Blondes' What's Up was a highlight for me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 02:50
Yes, it seems as if they have to weed out the mavericks so that the remaining contestants can be easily assimilated by a mainstream audience.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 02:58
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Yes, it seems as if they have to weed out the mavericks so that the remaining contestants can be easily assimilated by a mainstream audience.
Ah, I have a different take on that - it is not what can be easily assimilated by a mainstream audience, but what the producers believe a mainstream audience can assimilate.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 03:17
That's what I wanted to say, really.  Second guessing the audience's tastes so that it conforms to a norm that the industry is comfortable with.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 03:18
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 23:23
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:


This drum machine thing is perhaps the main reason I like many of the 80's Genesis songs better live. They sound less plastic, more alive, and the drumming is perhaps the main reason for that (actually I also often like 70's live Genesis better than studio, but that's not because of the drum machine, certainly).


Agreed, on both counts!  I feel the same way about Yes' studio albums vs. live performances particularly in the '70s, there's just no contest (though no drum machine issue there).  The studio albums are so slow and methodical compared to the energetic and passionate live shows.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I should point out that when I referred to high-octave singers I was meaning mezzo-soprano where there is naturally overlap between male and female vocal range (Tori Amos, Sharon den Adel, Simone Simons, Matt Bellamy, Robert Plant etc.) not soprano's like Sally Oldfield, Liv Kristine or Tarja Turunen - Kate Bush and Annie Haslam can hit the notes but they don't live there, male singers only enter the soprano range in falsetto.


I agree with rogerthat on Annie for sure - she hits some astoundingly high notes, she just has a very long range at her disposal.  I'm confused about Tarja, though. She never hits anything even approaching something that would be a high note for me to sing, whereas Annie hits things that I can't without sounding like a dying cat.  Am I missing something in Tarja's repertoire?

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I think for sometime, the emphasis has been on keeping out mistakes and this seems to include even minor imperfections that were left on record earlier...

But something has changed about just the way vocals are treated in the studio with a result that is not particularly agreeable to my taste.  Often times, the vocals sound better in the live performance of the same track so I wonder if it's just over compression, cutting out the subtle dynamic variations that make a performance lively and human.


Very true.  The industry-wide obsession with eliminating any irregularities removes so much of the personality... we're not even really talking about mistakes in many cases, just variations.  Over-compression is very often a problem on recordings I hear.  Not every part of a song should be at the same volume level (well, for most songs, sometimes that might be the intent - a wall of sound).

I might get slammed for this, but this is one of the reasons why I enjoy Korn.  Jonathan Davis' voice is *weird*.  Beautiful?  No.  But memorable, yes.  And contrary to the high-voice preference discussion, my favorite male singer in any sort of rock genre was definitely Peter Steele from Type O Negative.  RIP

The talk about the overly-polished, uniformly-accented singing in music got me thinking about a review or perhaps article I read a long time ago... I remember just about nothing of it except that it made my blood boil because it called Annie Haslam an "over-enunciating" amateur or hack or something like that.  She does enunciate with extraordinary clarity but never seems robotic to me like a lot of other vocalists do.  Also, Dean is absolutely right about classical training removing accents from singers, at least in western music.  You are taught to move your mouth quite differently compared to how you normally would when you speak - so that's not something new or restricted to pop music.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Yes, it seems as if they have to weed out the mavericks so that the remaining contestants can be easily assimilated by a mainstream audience.
Ah, I have a different take on that - it is not what can be easily assimilated by a mainstream audience, but what the producers believe a mainstream audience can assimilate.


Just like the radio. Cry  I agree with Dean.  The fact that songs by "oddball" artists can and do hit the billboard top 10 shows that a mainstream audience is capable of appreciating unique things... and perhaps even that they eventually get bored with hearing the same thing over and over again.  Though I suspect most people wouldn't appreciate many of our favorites no matter how hard we tried.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2014 at 23:50
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Interesting point about disowning cultural roots.  That is very much the case in India too.  Our current most celebrated composer A R Rahman is completely sold on the concept of 'one global music'.  And if that involves streamlining sounds to the point where the only Indian element left in the music is the language, so be it, apparently.  Even the pronunciation of Indian words is done in an anglicized, 'modern' way to fit these global hues.  Colour me cynical but to me, this just amounts to a boring uniformity and homogeneity in mainstream music.
I decided to listen to A R Rahman and I don't think I have heard more "corporate" sounding music. Sure there were different influences, but it all came together in a bland formulaic way with absolutely no creativity. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2014 at 01:09
Originally posted by Star_Song_Age_Less Star_Song_Age_Less wrote:



Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I should point out that when I referred to high-octave singers I was meaning mezzo-soprano where there is naturally overlap between male and female vocal range (Tori Amos, Sharon den Adel, Simone Simons, Matt Bellamy, Robert Plant etc.) not soprano's like Sally Oldfield, Liv Kristine or Tarja Turunen - Kate Bush and Annie Haslam can hit the notes but they don't live there, male singers only enter the soprano range in falsetto.


I agree with rogerthat on Annie for sure - she hits some astoundingly high notes, she just has a very long range at her disposal.  I'm confused about Tarja, though. She never hits anything even approaching something that would be a high note for me to sing, whereas Annie hits things that I can't without sounding like a dying cat.  Am I missing something in Tarja's repertoire?
Each vocal-range classification spans two-octaves and is shifted by roughly half an octave from the preceding one, such that a soprano can sing six semitones higher than a mezzo and a mezzo can sing five semitones lower than a soprano. So when a singer has a wider vocal range of say three octaves then it means that they can span two or more vocal-range classifications (it is possible for a 3-octave singer to sing soprano, mezzo and alto). Not every soprano can hit a G6

To clarify: Annie Haslam's five-octave vocal range spans from bass to soprano - she can sing soprano but she is not solely a soprano singer with much of her singing in the mezzo range (ie> "she can hit the notes but she doesn't live there")

According to wikipedia Tarja Turunen is termed a "lyric soprano" (ie warm tones), with a three to four octave range can also span from alto to soprano, but again most of her singing is in the mezzo range, unless singing live where she hits the really high notes
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2014 at 01:38
^^ I have never actually heard Annie sing anything that's in baritone range, let alone bass. The lowest is E3. Maybe she can vocalize over C7 like Mariah Carey but chose not to do so in recordings. If she has 5 octaves, she doesn't use them all, more like 3 1/2.
 
@Star Song Age Less I have heard worse. When Still Life was sent to CBS for distribution in USA, it came back with a note from their executive that it was out-of-tune. Ahem, given what garbage is deemed worthy of mainstream release, such a harsh and mostly baseless critique just reeks of prejudice. The industry doesn't want certain artists to succeed and thereby upset the apple cart.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2014 at 01:38
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Star_Song_Age_Less Star_Song_Age_Less wrote:



Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I should point out that when I referred to high-octave singers I was meaning mezzo-soprano where there is naturally overlap between male and female vocal range (Tori Amos, Sharon den Adel, Simone Simons, Matt Bellamy, Robert Plant etc.) not soprano's like Sally Oldfield, Liv Kristine or Tarja Turunen - Kate Bush and Annie Haslam can hit the notes but they don't live there, male singers only enter the soprano range in falsetto.


I agree with rogerthat on Annie for sure - she hits some astoundingly high notes, she just has a very long range at her disposal.  I'm confused about Tarja, though. She never hits anything even approaching something that would be a high note for me to sing, whereas Annie hits things that I can't without sounding like a dying cat.  Am I missing something in Tarja's repertoire?
Each vocal-range classification spans two-octaves and is shifted by roughly half an octave from the preceding one, such that a soprano can sing six semitones higher than a mezzo and a mezzo can sing five semitones lower than a soprano. So when a singer has a wider vocal range of say three octaves then it means that they can span two or more vocal-range classifications (it is possible for a 3-octave singer to sing soprano, mezzo and alto). Not every soprano can hit a G6

To clarify: Annie Haslam's five-octave vocal range spans from bass to soprano - she can sing soprano but she is not solely a soprano singer with much of her singing in the mezzo range (ie> "she can hit the notes but she doesn't live there")

According to wikipedia Tarja Turunen is termed a "lyric soprano" (ie warm tones), with a three to four octave range can also span from alto to soprano, but again most of her singing is in the mezzo range, unless singing live where she hits the really high notes


Yes, thank you though for the specifics. :)  I've just never heard Tarja sing high at all.  It's most likely that I'm just not interested in her solo stuff so I haven't heard when she's done it.  In the live Nightwish performances I've heard, she's taken the bottom part.  But that may have more to do with what the band as a whole wanted than where her range ends.
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