I have a theory that its the way the music is made currently that makes it unappealing. #1 the majority of music made today is not made by band playing live in a studio. Band members record their parts separately and the song is assembled by a producer. #2 drum machines are used in the majority of songs today, or when a drummer is used they play to a click track. This removes the "human factor" of the rhythm as computers can't "swing."
You are correct Ron. However, back in the day, for the most part, the band, or at least the rhythm section recorded at the same time, even if in separate rooms. To me, having as many members of the band playing together makes a difference in the feel of a recording. You can then add things like a sax solo and it all works. Now a days, you can record everyone separately and mix them together. However, this requires the use of a click track which I feel robs music of pace and feel and makes the music sound stilted. The recording engineer has used them in some of the recordings my son has made and I am not a fan of the click track. It seems to be a necessary evil in today’s world.
We can go back aways even further than that Ron, the machine age and music recording technology changed the process of recording and therefore also eventually the art of making music.But hasn’t this been true for a long time? Hasn’t pop music been recorded and mixed in multi-track for a long time now?
I don’t think the first Madonna album in 1983 was recorded with a live band playing at the same time in the same place? Then it was multi-track also, no?
Yes this is a one point stereo/one microphone recording and it's the best of it's kind of what I have heard so far in my opinion.This is how to do it. Some interesting info lower down the page.
https://www.soundliaison.com/index.php/408-carmen-gomes-inc-dont-you-cry
from the liner notes; Carmen Gomes ''Don't You Cry"Multi track recording has advantages and disadvantages. The good is that you can make an instrument louder or softer as you please. The bad thing when the recording is done in one room is phase. Maybe, the most time consuming aspect of our way of recording is getting the phase between the mics right. Frans de Rond is a true genius in that field and his expertise is one of the secrets to our well defined sound stage.
Now with only one mic the challenge lay elsewhere.
Mixing was no longer possible. We would have to make the complete sound stage right there by carefully moving each instrument closer or further away as well as left and right in relationship to the microphone.
Lots of good came out of it and indeed it made it possible for lesser musicians to get away with being lesser musicians.Who developed the first multi track recorder? Answer....Les Paul...many many moons ago. Les and Mary Ford used the recorder to make the first multi track recordings. The rest is history for better or worse.
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