Rob wrote:
Eh, no matter how well-rehearsed, a live band's sound can never
sparkle as much as a recording agonized over by a practiced
electronic musician, producer or engineer. The best they can do is
try to approximate it and play a little faster to make up for the
shortcomings of live sound. Conversely, I would question whether
electronic musicians are really trying to approximate that live
sound; I know that when I've used a sampled break, for example, it
was because I wanted it to sound like a sampled break.
Live bands might have more "energy" or whatever it is that caused
people to follow bands like the Dead and Phish around slavishly, but
even in those cases I've always found their live performances lacking
compared to their comparatively primitive studio releases with their
well-defined stereo images, carefully chosen effects and precisely
mixed vocals. Compare a studio recording of "Terrapin Station"
or "Reba" to the live equivalent, and I really think anyone with an
ear would be hard pressed to say the live one sounds as good.
You're insane!-)
Plus IMO you're not actually listening to the music, you're listening to
the production. Terrapin Station, the Studio album is overproduced and
two dimensional IMO. Yes, I know it's a technical masterpiece. I know
the vocals are mostly in tune and the arrangements are correct, but,
compared to the live performances of the early '80's, the recordings are
rather flat and anodyne.
I do understand what you are talking about. Most musicians prefer the
recordings of their own material produced under sterile conditions. An
awful lot of bands kill the live dynamic and sound this way,
particularly if conned into using a click-track and painstakingly
building the piece track by track. Before long the whole thing is dead
in the water.
One of the worst crimes to my ear, is the idea that the band should be
able to play a studio track live and have it sound exactly like it did
on the album and that the studio recording should be limited to being a
representation of the live version. These are actually two very
different mediums, with very different creative possibilities.
Live, the Dead did avoid playing numbers like 'Box of Rain', largely
because they were not good enough singers, preferring to play numbers
which had more room for improvisation and band interaction, stuff which
just doesn't happen on studio albums with all the best will in the world.
Suffice it to say that my playlist is full of live Dead recordings
rather than any of the studio albums. I don't think you're really
comparing like with like. There are artists for whom what you say is
true (The most extreme being XTC, naturally ;) but I think you chose a
particularly bad example there.
cheers,
tim
/|\
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