
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
First, to define my use of the word “produced”…
I’m talking about records that really focus on:
1.) Hi-Q sound quality
2.) Singing that is done by people who have good voices and can actually sing good without help from Autotune and editing
3.) Playing is done by people who can play more than simple basics and therefore only build music from that limited playing ability.
4.) The songs arranged and recorded using techniques that will give the product a polished feel
Now the question….
Recently the record “Is This It” by the Strokes was voted Album of the Decade in some circles. http://www.nme.com/news/the-strokes/48412
The album was all about recording with a very raw, unpolished, “garage band” sound which appealed to a lot of the youth and which also defines the way a lot of bands recorded in the last 10 years or so.
Without giving any specific opinion about that type of music or style of recording…I’m wondering if now that the home recording revolution has been raging for quite a long time and everyone and their mother has attempted to “record an album” in some “space” they call a studio…
…will there be a shift and return toward more “produced" types of records or will the whole “Lo-Fi” approach be the bulk of how records are made from now on?
I get the feeling that the Lo-Fi approach was some sort of liberation movement ushered in by new technologies that opened up recording to everyone…on the cheap….and also a segue off the “grunge” styles of music that had come a little before the digital revolution put a “studio” in every bedroom.
So now that’s it been with us for a good decade or more…will people start to refine their techniques or will they keep it Lo-Fi...for whatever reasons…?
I’m talking about records that really focus on:
1.) Hi-Q sound quality
2.) Singing that is done by people who have good voices and can actually sing good without help from Autotune and editing
3.) Playing is done by people who can play more than simple basics and therefore only build music from that limited playing ability.
4.) The songs arranged and recorded using techniques that will give the product a polished feel
Now the question….
Recently the record “Is This It” by the Strokes was voted Album of the Decade in some circles. http://www.nme.com/news/the-strokes/48412
The album was all about recording with a very raw, unpolished, “garage band” sound which appealed to a lot of the youth and which also defines the way a lot of bands recorded in the last 10 years or so.
Without giving any specific opinion about that type of music or style of recording…I’m wondering if now that the home recording revolution has been raging for quite a long time and everyone and their mother has attempted to “record an album” in some “space” they call a studio…
…will there be a shift and return toward more “produced" types of records or will the whole “Lo-Fi” approach be the bulk of how records are made from now on?
I get the feeling that the Lo-Fi approach was some sort of liberation movement ushered in by new technologies that opened up recording to everyone…on the cheap….and also a segue off the “grunge” styles of music that had come a little before the digital revolution put a “studio” in every bedroom.
So now that’s it been with us for a good decade or more…will people start to refine their techniques or will they keep it Lo-Fi...for whatever reasons…?