shamar
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Post by shamar on Sept 26, 2024 21:53:31 GMT
That would be the In Nuce versions running at the wrong speed, and the snippet at the end of Mother Love having been slowed down considerably so that the resultant pitch shift made it match the desired key. Remember that the original single was recorded so that an engineer could try his hand at a Phil Spector-like production - that included speeding up the recordings to raise the pitch and intensity as an effect (gimmick, if you will). That's what you hear on the box, and on the original single. It's a pitch shifting effect, but as different from autotune as tuning an engine is from replacing it with a bigger one. And, crucially: the shifted pitch is on the original master tape. And it sounds unnatural. Like Lennon's vocal on "Real Love"
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BrƎИsꓘi
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Sept 27, 2024 6:21:57 GMT
That would be the In Nuce versions running at the wrong speed, and the snippet at the end of Mother Love having been slowed down considerably so that the resultant pitch shift made it match the desired key. Remember that the original single was recorded so that an engineer could try his hand at a Phil Spector-like production - that included speeding up the recordings to raise the pitch and intensity as an effect (gimmick, if you will). That's what you hear on the box, and on the original single. It's a pitch shifting effect, but as different from autotune as tuning an engine is from replacing it with a bigger one. And, crucially: the shifted pitch is on the original master tape. And it sounds unnatural. Like Lennon's vocal on "Real Love" which brings the whole discussion nicely full circle. Pitch-shifting (rightly or wrongly) almost always sounds unnatural. in some cases that's the whole point - in others it's as ThomasQuinn says "to match a desired key". Criticizing the use of pitch-shifting on "new versions" of unfinished recordings ( Mother Love and Real Love) would only be a valid argument if this was a technique that the artist never deployed in their own lifetime. However, in both Freddie Mercury's and John Lennon's cases, two their respective bands' had huge hits Strawberry Fields Forever and Another One Bites The Dust deploying the effect to great success - and (largely) both vocals sound unnatural.
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scandal
Tatterdemalion
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Post by scandal on Sept 27, 2024 8:18:37 GMT
And it sounds unnatural. Like Lennon's vocal on "Real Love" which brings the whole discussion nicely full circle. Pitch-shifting (rightly or wrongly) almost always sounds unnatural. in some cases that's the whole point - in others it's as ThomasQuinn says "to match a desired key". Criticizing the use of pitch-shifting on "new versions" of unfinished recordings ( Mother Love and Real Love) would only be a valid argument if this was a technique that the artist never deployed in their own lifetime. However, in both Freddie Mercury's and John Lennon's cases, two their respective bands' had huge hits Strawberry Fields Forever and Another One Bites The Dust deploying the effect to great success - and (largely) both vocals sound unnatural. Use of pitch shift on AOBTD was an artistic desicion, which can be compared to using a vocoder to achieve a different intended vocal representation. Use of autotune of TNCD is a production decision which has altered the artist's intended (or I'd rather say destroyed) sound picture. I'm in a way surprised so many people here can't feel the difference. As Freddie said in his interviews he put a lot of effort into his pharasing and intonation when he was recording. I remember a particular quote when he was referring to Aretha Franklin's ability to nail the phrasing and him taking many takes to achieve the same. In other hand, given the widespread use of autotune in today's "music" there have to be a proportion of people among Queen fans who as well do not care about all these intricacies.
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Post by ThomasQuinn on Sept 27, 2024 8:22:23 GMT
And it sounds unnatural. Like Lennon's vocal on "Real Love" which brings the whole discussion nicely full circle. Pitch-shifting (rightly or wrongly) almost always sounds unnatural. in some cases that's the whole point - in others it's as ThomasQuinn says "to match a desired key". Criticizing the use of pitch-shifting on "new versions" of unfinished recordings ( Mother Love and Real Love) would only be a valid argument if this was a technique that the artist never deployed in their own lifetime. However, in both Freddie Mercury's and John Lennon's cases, two their respective bands' had huge hits Strawberry Fields Forever and Another One Bites The Dust deploying the effect to great success - and (largely) both vocals sound unnatural. ...and of course "In The Lap Of The Gods", where it is blatantly obvious. Which was the whole point: a stylistic choice, even if it's not one that's to everyone's taste. However, contrary to ITLOTG *we* have a choice here - to play the original version or the new version of Queen's debut album. Just like Bowie-fans now have a choice of two radically different versions of his personal Hot Space album, Never Let Me Down. Another artistic choice the artist never made - but widely seen as a serious improvement. And if you don't enjoy it, play the original, last I've heard they're not sending Greg Brooks house-to-house to confiscate old copies.
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BrƎИsꓘi
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Sept 27, 2024 8:54:02 GMT
Use of pitch shift on AOBTD was an artistic desicion, which can be compared to using a vocoder to achieve a different intended vocal representation. Use of autotune of TNCD is a production decision which has altered the artist's intended (or I'd rather say destroyed) sound picture. I'm in a way surprised so many people here can't feel the difference. As Freddie said in his interviews he put a lot of effort into his pharasing and intonation when he was recording. I remember a particular quote when he was referring to Aretha Franklin's ability to nail the phrasing and him taking many takes to achieve the same. i find it a little insulting that you imply that I "can't feel" the difference (you were quoting me, after all). i do. the point is that YOU were the one who said pitch shifting sounded unnatural (Real Love). I think you'll find ALL pitch-shifting sounds unnatural - it's meant to be. All of the pitch-shifted songs mentioned sound much better for it - and are always an artistic choice. re: the QI autotune - that is also an artistic choice. bottom line: as said before (many times) if the choice is hearing something new "fixed", or not hearing it at all. i know which i prefer. everytime.
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manymilesaway
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Post by manymilesaway on Sept 27, 2024 9:15:38 GMT
That would need more remixing and pitch controlling than is humanly possible . Freddie's pitch was better in 1982 than it was in 1973, I don't think Hot Space would "need" much pitch correction at all.
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Post by airpodsmax on Sept 27, 2024 9:19:15 GMT
The main theme of this topic is autotune.
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leighburne
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Post by leighburne on Sept 27, 2024 9:19:32 GMT
I don’t wanna keep dragging this thread back to Thin Lizzy, but their new 1976 box set arrived with me yesterday and it just goes to show how overpriced this Queen one is.
In the Lizzy box you get two studio albums, both in original and newly remixed forms, two discs of unreleased studio outtakes and the corresponding BBC sessions, a previously unreleased live concert from the era, and a Blu-ray with Atmos, 5.1 and stereo mixes, plus a nice book. All for £70.
That’s less than half the price of Queen I.
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Post by airpodsmax on Sept 27, 2024 9:24:43 GMT
I don’t wanna keep dragging this thread back to Thin Lizzy, but their new 1976 box set arrived with me yesterday and it just goes to show how overpriced this Queen one is. In the Lizzy box you get two studio albums, both in original and newly remixed forms, two discs of unreleased studio outtakes and the corresponding BBC sessions, a previously unreleased live concert from the era, and a Blu-ray with Atmos, 5.1 and stereo mixes, plus a nice book. All for £70. That’s less than half the price of Queen I. Queen music can't be cheap. Otherwise, the Queen is not Queen
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Post by airpodsmax on Sept 27, 2024 9:26:05 GMT
I don’t wanna keep dragging this thread back to Thin Lizzy, but their new 1976 box set arrived with me yesterday and it just goes to show how overpriced this Queen one is. In the Lizzy box you get two studio albums, both in original and newly remixed forms, two discs of unreleased studio outtakes and the corresponding BBC sessions, a previously unreleased live concert from the era, and a Blu-ray with Atmos, 5.1 and stereo mixes, plus a nice book. All for £70. That’s less than half the price of Queen I. This thread dragging by autotune
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Post by ThomasQuinn on Sept 27, 2024 9:28:39 GMT
That would need more remixing and pitch controlling than is humanly possible . Freddie's pitch was better in 1982 than it was in 1973, I don't think Hot Space would "need" much pitch correction at all. The Never Let Me Down-treatment might work wonders, though. I really do think quite a bit of the cringe could be stripped from Hot Space by remaking it from the ground up, using the original recordings wherever possible but re-recording (a la Made In Heaven) by the original performers where necessary.
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manymilesaway
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Post by manymilesaway on Sept 27, 2024 9:37:01 GMT
I don’t wanna keep dragging this thread back to Thin Lizzy, but their new 1976 box set arrived with me yesterday and it just goes to show how overpriced this Queen one is. In the Lizzy box you get two studio albums, both in original and newly remixed forms, two discs of unreleased studio outtakes and the corresponding BBC sessions, a previously unreleased live concert from the era, and a Blu-ray with Atmos, 5.1 and stereo mixes, plus a nice book. All for £70. That’s less than half the price of Queen I. I get that, and I'm not saying I disagree that it's a way better deal and package than what we're getting from Queen IBUT It's Queen. Queen is so fucking beloved all over the world that this shit is pretty much guaranteed to ATLEAST break even, let alone profit (which it totally will.) They know they can put out a premium price, because they're big enough for these things to not be a risk. Thin Lizzy doesn't have the almost religious-like following that Queen does, so they wouldn't be ABLE to half ass something like this. Like let's be real. Most average people MAYBE know The Boys Are Back In Town and probably don't even know the name of the band behind it. Whereas with Queen, I could probably pick some random person off the street and they'd be able to list atleast like 3-5 songs they know Queen by. The demand is higher, so naturally, they'd price it higher. High demand also means less risk, means no need to go above and beyond. The inclusion of another CD or a whole live show wouldn't really affect the decision to purchase for that many people.
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Post by peacelovingguy on Sept 27, 2024 9:42:48 GMT
Freddie's pitch was better in 1982 than it was in 1973, I don't think Hot Space would "need" much pitch correction at all. The Never Let Me Down-treatment might work wonders, though. I really do think quite a bit of the cringe could be stripped from Hot Space by remaking it from the ground up, using the original recordings wherever possible but re-recording (a la Made In Heaven) by the original performers where necessary. I’d be comfortable with a complete rebuild of Hot Space. Hell, change the track order if they want to. Use AI to give us even worse videos than the original cheap crap. But just give us everything they recorded with Bowie. In fact, as Olivia Wilde is the only person ever to make something from Hot Space popular, I think she should either direct or appear in a music video for every song on the album.
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BrƎИsꓘi
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Sept 27, 2024 9:50:15 GMT
That would need more remixing and pitch controlling than is humanly possible . Freddie's pitch was better in 1982 than it was in 1973, I don't think Hot Space would "need" much pitch correction at all. just all of the other corrections possible: song-writing, arrangements, playing, fake instruments and the general (long-gone use-by date for rock bands doing dance/soul/funkdisco music)
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pg
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Post by pg on Sept 27, 2024 9:58:23 GMT
. Like let's be real. Most average people MAYBE know The Boys Are Back In Town and probably don't even know the name of the band behind it. Whereas with Queen, I could probably pick some random person off the street and they'd be able to list atleast like 3-5 songs they know Queen by. None of those songs will be in this release though. You're effectively comparing Thin Lizzy's best-selling albums with Queen's worst-selling album. That evens up the comparison a fair bit.
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leighburne
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Post by leighburne on Sept 27, 2024 10:01:09 GMT
Yeah, I’m willing to bet Joe Public would struggle to name even one song off Queen’s debut album.
Also “Queen are more famous so it’s understandable that they might fleece us” really isn’t an argument that holds water with me.
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sunshine
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Post by sunshine on Sept 27, 2024 10:38:08 GMT
Yeah, I’m willing to bet Joe Public would struggle to name even one song off Queen’s debut album. Also “Queen are more famous so it’s understandable that they might fleece us” really isn’t an argument that holds water with me. Of course, first principle of economy, high demand is increasing the price.
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Post by pennyroyalty on Sept 27, 2024 10:44:00 GMT
People seem to conflate two different types of processing. None of the other recordings mentioned (ITLOTG, Mother Love, Real Love, AOBTD, Strawberry Fields Forever) uses selective digital pitch correction in the same sense as that used in the new mix of TNCD or in FIA. In all the other cases this was either analog or (in the ML case possibly, digital, pitch shifting, which inevitably occurs along with speed shifting and it was applied to the entire recording (or a portion of one of the takes in the case of SFF, see this video). The result of faster/slower playback is that you have the exact same sound that is heard at a higher/lower pitch or if you move it to the digital world, you have the exact same waveform that is read off faster/more slowly, which leads to the raising/lowering of perceived pitch. No information is lost, no information is altered. Let's talk in digital terms now, since nowadays everything is digital. If you want to change speed and pitch permanently, you essentially need to compress (for the speed-up/higher pitch effect) or expand (for slower pace/lower pitch) the waveform along the time-scale. A new digital file is created. Assuming it's the same sampling rate, the samples are taken at the exact same points in time, but since the waveform is now either compressed or expanded, the amplitude levels stored at each sample are now slightly different. This means information is altered, but everything changes together and at high sampling rates that are used in professional audio engineering the resulting waveform is still a very close approximation to the original. However, if you were to repeat the process by going back and forth between two different speeds, you would of course degrade the recording and with each pass the digital representation would depart farther away from the original source. This is the same in analog recordings. You need to re-record the audio while playing it back at a different speed. If you do that repeatedly, you'll degrade the recording. The crucial point is that both digital degradation and pitch-shifting/speed-readjustments happen in a mathematically predictable way accross the board. As a result, if you slow down a digital copy of AOBTD you'll not only be able to hear it at the "right" speed and pitch, but your digital file will be a very close approximation of the original analog recording before the speed-up. What happens when you modify the vocals selectively in a DAW, as in the case of FIA and TNCD, is a whole different matter. By pitch-shifting individual notes you substantially change the information contained in individual portions of the waveform. The amplitude levels at individual samples change and there are local changes in frequency. Once done you can't easily reverse the process. I mean you can shift the notes back, but the output will not be the same, because the first shift might have altered the extent of vibrato applied to a given note, and the original may not be recoverable by shifing the entire note back to its original pitch. These are obviously minute details, which individually would not probably change the entire experince of the track. However, if you do it this way along the entire track, you essentially lose them. E.g. one of the things that Fil from the Wings of Pegasus rightly points out in his video is that Fred occasionally sang slightly sharp (i.e. at a higher pitch than intended). It's not a mistake as such, it's part of a singer's individual voice quality and what made Fred sound like himself. This is also seen in the original TNCD vocal track - i.e. the overall track is flat (too low) by more or less the same amount, but locally some notes are less flat than others. Assuming Fil's interpretation, which I think is very convincing, Fred heard the track in his headphones at a lower pitch than it was actually recorded and sang accordingly. In those instances where he was slighly above the pitch he intended to sing, his notes are less flat than where he was spot on. As I said before, these are minute details, not noticeable alone without closer examination (and possibly graphic visualisation), but once you level everything by pitch correction, you lose some of the essence of the singer's voice. Some of you may be familiar with the atrocity that has plagued YouTube for a couple of years now, which amounts to reworking a song from a major to a minor key or the other way around (if not listen e.g. to this, but don't sue me for damages). The technique used to achive this type of pitch shifting as applied in TNCD is essentially the same. Of course the result is more extreme, because here the instrument parts have to be modified to, but at the end of the day the difference is only a matter of scale. Now, you don't have to accept criticism of QPL's creative decisions. You can say selective pitch correction is fine or like the new recordings despite it. These are esthetic choices on which we can disagree. However, selective pitch correction is objectively a technologically different process than speeding up or slowing down an analog or digital recording and it objectively produces different effects.
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Post by pennyroyalty on Sept 27, 2024 10:52:36 GMT
Freddie's pitch was better in 1982 than it was in 1973, I don't think Hot Space would "need" much pitch correction at all. just all of the other corrections possible: song-writing, arrangements, playing, fake instruments and the general (long-gone use-by date for rock bands doing dance/soul/funkdisco music) I'd actually LOVE to see a Hot Space box set, but it's never gonna happen given BM's and RT's attitude towards that album.
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Post by snakecharmer on Sept 27, 2024 11:07:04 GMT
We have had around 22 pages about autotune/pitch control , surely we can try and move the conversation on a little bit by now. Saying that you have to expect to pay top price for Queen Box Sets because this is Queen seems a little bit arrogant to me. How about giving something back to the fan's who brought the original Queen album back in 1973 and all the fans that have supported them all these years. I wonder he comes up with the pricing structure for this Box Set ? Do Brian & Roger have a say in that matter ? I doubt it.
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Post by airpodsmax on Sept 27, 2024 11:17:18 GMT
We have had around 22 pages about autotune/pitch control , surely we can try and move the conversation on a little bit by now. Saying that you have to expect to pay top price for Queen Box Sets because this is Queen seems a little bit arrogant to me. How about giving something back to the fan's who brought the original Queen album back in 1973 and all the fans that have supported them all these years. I wonder he comes up with the pricing structure for this Box Set ? Do Brian & Roger have a say in that matter ? I doubt it. Autotune became more important than content. Nobody discusses about hangman live 1976, Mad the Swine in right place of the album and so on. Only autotune and price.
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Post by mercurialfreddie on Sept 27, 2024 11:18:19 GMT
People seem to conflate two different types of processing. None of the other recordings mentioned (ITLOTG, Mother Love, Real Love, AOBTD, Strawberry Fields Forever) uses selective digital pitch correction in the same sense as that used in the new mix of TNCD or in FIA. In all the other cases this was either analog or (in the ML case possibly, digital, pitch shifting, which inevitably occurs along with speed shifting and it was applied to the entire recording (or a portion of one of the takes in the case of SFF, see this video). The result of faster/slower playback is that you have the exact same sound that is heard at a higher/lower pitch or if you move it to the digital world, you have the exact same waveform that is read off faster/more slowly, which leads to the raising/lowering of perceived pitch. No information is lost, no information is altered. Let's talk in digital terms now, since nowadays everything is digital. If you want to change speed and pitch permanently, you essentially need to compress (for the speed-up/higher pitch effect) or expand (for slower pace/lower pitch) the waveform along the time-scale. A new digital file is created. Assuming it's the same sampling rate, the samples are taken at the exact same points in time, but since the waveform is now either compressed or expanded, the amplitude levels stored at each sample are now slightly different. This means information is altered, but everything changes together and at high sampling rates that are used in professional audio engineering the resulting waveform is still a very close approximation to the original. However, if you were to repeat the process by going back and forth between two different speeds, you would of course degrade the recording and with each pass the digital representation would depart farther away from the original source. This is the same in analog recordings. You need to re-record the audio while playing it back at a different speed. If you do that repeatedly, you'll degrade the recording. The crucial point is that both digital degradation and pitch-shifting/speed-readjustments happen in a mathematically predictable way accross the board. As a result, if you slow down a digital copy of AOBTD you'll not only be able to hear it at the "right" speed and pitch, but your digital file will be a very close approximation of the original analog recording before the speed-up. What happens when you modify the vocals selectively in a DAW, as in the case of FIA and TNCD, is a whole different matter. By pitch-shifting individual notes you substantially change the information contained in individual portions of the waveform. The amplitude levels at individual samples change and there are local changes in frequency. Once done you can't easily reverse the process. I mean you can shift the notes back, but the output will not be the same, because the first shift might have altered the extent of vibrato applied to a given note, and the original may not be recoverable by shifing the entire note back to its original pitch. These are obviously minute details, which individually would not probably change the entire experince of the track. However, if you do it this way along the entire track, you essentially lose them. E.g. one of the things that Fil from the Wings of Pegasus rightly points out in his video is that Fred occasionally sang slightly sharp (i.e. at a higher pitch than intended). It's not a mistake as such, it's part of a singer's individual voice quality and what made Fred sound like himself. This is also seen in the original TNCD vocal track - i.e. the overall track is flat (too low) by more or less the same amount, but locally some notes are less flat than others. Assuming Fil's interpretation, which I think is very convincing, Fred heard the track in his headphones at a lower pitch than it was actually recorded and sang accordingly. In those instances where he was slighly above the pitch he intended to sing, his notes are less flat than where he was spot on. As I said before, these are minute details, not noticeable alone without closer examination (and possibly graphic visualisation), but once you level everything by pitch correction, you lose some of the essence of the singer's voice. Some of you may be familiar with the atrocity that has plagued YouTube for a couple of years now, which amounts to reworking a song from a major to a minor key or the other way around (if not listen e.g. to this, but don't sue me for damages). The technique used to achive this type of pitch shifting as applied in TNCD is essentially the same. Of course the result is more extreme, because here the instrument parts have to be modified to, but at the end of the day the difference is only a matter of scale. Now, you don't have to accept criticism of QPL's creative decisions. You can say selective pitch correction is fine or like the new recordings despite it. These are esthetic choices on which we can disagree. However, selective pitch correction is objectively a technologically different process than speeding up or slowing down an analog or digital recording and it objectively produces different effects. What happens when you modify the vocals selectively in a DAW, as in the case of FIA and TNCD, is a whole different matter. By pitch-shifting individual notes you substantially change the information contained in individual portions of the waveform. The amplitude levels at individual samples change and there are local changes in frequency. Once done you can't easily reverse the process. I mean you can shift the notes back, but the output will not be the same, because the first shift might have altered the extent of vibrato applied to a given note, and the original may not be recoverable by shifing the entire note back to its original pitch. These are obviously minute details, which individually would not probably change the entire experince of the track. However, if you do it this way along the entire track, you essentially lose them. E.g. one of the things that Fil from the Wings of Pegasus rightly points out in his video is that Fred occasionally sang slightly sharp (i.e. at a higher pitch than intended). It's not a mistake as such, it's part of a singer's individual voice quality and what made Fred sound like himself. This is also seen in the original TNCD vocal track - i.e. the overall track is flat (too low) by more or less the same amount, but locally some notes are less flat than others. Assuming Fil's interpretation, which I think is very convincing, Fred heard the track in his headphones at a lower pitch than it was actually recorded and sang accordingly. In those instances where he was slighly above the pitch he intended to sing, his notes are less flat than where he was spot on. As I said before, these are minute details, not noticeable alone without closer examination (and possibly graphic visualisation), but once you level everything by pitch correction, you lose some of the essence of the singer's voice. THIS
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Post by ThomasQuinn on Sept 27, 2024 11:20:16 GMT
We have had around 22 pages about autotune/pitch control , surely we can try and move the conversation on a little bit by now. Saying that you have to expect to pay top price for Queen Box Sets because this is Queen seems a little bit arrogant to me. How about giving something back to the fan's who brought the original Queen album back in 1973 and all the fans that have supported them all these years. I wonder he comes up with the pricing structure for this Box Set ? Do Brian & Roger have a say in that matter ? I doubt it. I wasn't in the room, but going by industry practices and some common sense inference, I'd say Brian and Roger would probably have the final say in terms of content (with definite input, even attempts to steer in a certain direction, from the record company), and the company would decide on the price for the set without input from Brian and Roger.
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manymilesaway
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Post by manymilesaway on Sept 27, 2024 11:30:22 GMT
We have had around 22 pages about autotune/pitch control , surely we can try and move the conversation on a little bit by now. Saying that you have to expect to pay top price for Queen Box Sets because this is Queen seems a little bit arrogant to me. How about giving something back to the fan's who brought the original Queen album back in 1973 and all the fans that have supported them all these years. I wonder he comes up with the pricing structure for this Box Set ? Do Brian & Roger have a say in that matter ? I doubt it. For every 1 post about pitch correction, there's about 7 more that say "STOP COMPLAINING ABOUT THE PITCH CORRECTION !!!! BLINDLY SUPPORT THE BAND !!!" and it's just as bad, no, worse. Look, there is absolutely nothing wrong with loving the band, their music, and this boxset. I personally do. I'm excited as fuck for this boxset. But there's also nothing wrong with critiquing a product that you're paying over 200 dollars for. If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings.
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BrƎИsꓘi
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Sept 27, 2024 12:39:59 GMT
If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings. that's a terrible analogy, because in the case of these "corrections" the hair/fingernails have been removed - not added
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manymilesaway
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Post by manymilesaway on Sept 27, 2024 12:43:20 GMT
If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings. that's a terrible analogy, because in the case of these "corrections" the hair/fingernails have been removed - not added I wasn't comparing the hair and fingernails directly to pitch correction, I was just using that to say something undesirable that I did not ask for is in this food. I don't want it there, and I have the right to not want it there. Freddie not being 100% perfectly on pitch is totally something I'd expect and accept from 1973 material, so the addition of the pitch correction is the undesirable element here.
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BrƎИsꓘi
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Sept 27, 2024 13:00:49 GMT
If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings. that's a terrible analogy, because in the case of these "corrections" the hair/fingernails have been removed - not added I wasn't comparing the hair and fingernails directly to pitch correction, I was just using that to say something undesirable that I did not ask for is in this food. I don't want it there, and I have the right to not want it there. but it's still a terrible analogy, because (either way) when you order a meal in a restaurant, you don't get to supervise the preparation and cooking of the meal.
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Post by pennyroyalty on Sept 27, 2024 15:11:17 GMT
If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings. I wasn't comparing the hair and fingernails directly to pitch correction, I was just using that to say something undesirable that I did not ask for is in this food. I don't want it there, and I have the right to not want it there. but it's still a terrible analogy, because (either way) when you order a meal in a restaurant, you don't get to supervise the preparation and cooking of the meal. Actually you make the analogy sound even more compelling, since we don't get to supervise the preparation of the box set either.
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Dimitris
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Post by Dimitris on Sept 27, 2024 15:15:46 GMT
We have had around 22 pages about autotune/pitch control , surely we can try and move the conversation on a little bit by now. Saying that you have to expect to pay top price for Queen Box Sets because this is Queen seems a little bit arrogant to me. How about giving something back to the fan's who brought the original Queen album back in 1973 and all the fans that have supported them all these years. I wonder he comes up with the pricing structure for this Box Set ? Do Brian & Roger have a say in that matter ? I doubt it. For every 1 post about pitch correction, there's about 7 more that say "STOP COMPLAINING ABOUT THE PITCH CORRECTION !!!! BLINDLY SUPPORT THE BAND !!!" and it's just as bad, no, worse. Look, there is absolutely nothing wrong with loving the band, their music, and this boxset. I personally do. I'm excited as fuck for this boxset. But there's also nothing wrong with critiquing a product that you're paying over 200 dollars for. If my food was served and it had hair and fingernails in it, I wouldn't just chow down on that food because I didn't want to hurt the chef's feelings. There is another point of view also: Is this stidio trick annoying? For some yes for other not. Personal I didn't care, it is a different beast this release. The original still stays around. Queen with their way right or wrong, opened their archive, did something they always wanted, they make this album sound better according to their artistic taste. So I dont know what's most annoying autome few seconds or complaints about the forthcoming release. Something we are all waiting for decades.
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Post by airpodsmax on Sept 27, 2024 15:55:01 GMT
They don't release box sets, they are freaks, they released a box set loaded with autotune, they are freaks twice over. They raised the price tag on the box set, they are cosmic freaks. Guys. You have to appreciate what you get.After all, the day may come when there will be no box sets. It is still unknown how Sony will manage with Queen catalog.
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