
mshilarious
Banned
On a recording website, almost the ultimate irony.
We're all fools !![]()
Well we are. It's important to be self-aware. That includes me, of course. But when we get so self-important that we think we are creating great and important art that cannot otherwise exist, 95% of the time we are being delusional.
There are a few good reasons to make a recording; the most compelling is that you are capturing a recording that cannot otherwise be repeated. You know that any playback on any medium will be inferior, but you have no choice. I call this the "Kind of Blue" argument. Wouldn't you rather hear Miles & Coltrane live in 1959? Me too, but that's impossible. But listen to that pre-NR recording. It sounds both beautiful and terrible at the same time; that is a very dynamic recording that suffers greatly from tape hiss. I prefer to listen to my own remaster with digital NR and a bit of compression to even out the disparate levels between different solos.
On the other hand, most orchestral recordings are nothing special, any good orchestra live will be better. Especially the 1812 with cannon--but very few playback systems can even properly reproduce an orchestral bass drum (those are BIG suckers).
I suppose it's nice to hear exactly how Toscanini conducted, but those recordings are so old that they sound quite bad. They are really mostly of academic interest.
Then you have the rock recording that is assembled in pieces, but does it have to be? Brian Wilson said if he could have had ProTools in 1967 he would have finished Smile then. But in 2004 his band played it start to finish live (which was outstanding by the way).
Finally, you have the hobbyist argument, which is straightforward. Do whatever tickles your fancy.