Folderol wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Feb 2010 21:52:01 +0000
> Frank Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>   
>> Hi Ralf
>> I think I heard this for the first time on:
>> Empire State of mind (part 2) by Alicia Keys.
>>
>> There is a strange very low vocal in part of the 2nd verse, It
>> doesn't sound natural at all.
>> I now assume I'm hearing this 'auto tune thing..
>>
>> It was one of my favourite songs but now all I hear is this strange vocal!
>>
>> What a waste!
>>
>> Cheers
>> Bob
>>     
>
> The first time I got *really* angry about it was when I heard Cher's
> 'Believe'. Cher has a powerful voice and this is a great song, all
> totally ruined by stupid autotune. I can't bear to listen to it because
> it just grates on my nerves.

A subject for this thread could be "The castrato in the Italian opera".

There's some kind of mental eunuch-hood and in addition the same kind of 
singing rubbish like there once was for the Italian Opera.

I guess "Believe" is the song that Auto-Tune made public. Back in the 
days I didn't like this song, but not because of Auto-Tune, just because 
it's not my kind of music. Here we had discussions about this song. I 
said that I don't like that kind of music, but that it's a perfectly 
judged composing and production and I started defending the "vocoder" 
and I go on defending it when somebody said that it's Auto-Tune.
I like the vocoder like usage of  Auto-Tune, the way I like any other 
effect too, but I also would be annoyed, if there would be delay on 
every voice for every song.
The other usage of Auto-Tune, fixing the tuning, were it doesn't need a 
fix is absolute evil. I don't like classical trained vocals or artistic 
singing. IMO singing should express emotions. When I'm angry I might 
throw a plate against the wall, but I don't start to juggle with plates. 
Most artists today tend to show that they are able to juggle with their 
vocals, because they have well trained vocals. The problem with this is, 
that 1. they all do the same juggling tricks, nobody has an own style 
and 2. they aren't as well trained as people guess that they are, most 
of the times they just learned some tricks, how to control the voice.
I wonder that if a singer is able to sing like a human, they start to 
"fix" the personality and make the singer sound like a robot, even if 
they avoid the vocoder effect. Considered by the technical singing 
abilities a lot of "good" singers for popular music are/were "bad" 
singers, but they were able to phrase the singing by their own style.
It's not the sequencer that killed music. Even worse step sequencers 
aren't that bad, e.g. listen to Herbie Hancock, Bill Laswell, The Who, 
Blondie, Peter Gabriel, Mike Oldfield etc., the sequencers they used a 
long time ago were very bad, but the music anyway most of the times was 
alive.

Time to write to the American Psychiatric Association, perhaps there's 
the need to reconsider if people that have personality don't have a 
personality disorder, but the loss of any individuality is pandemic.

The humans are loosing individuality. It's understandable for used car 
dealers, bankers, soldiers for hire, but there should be opposition by 
musicians, resp. by all kinds of artists.

It's pest! Watching (and listening) all kinds of arts around the turn of 
the millennium there are "Auto-Tune" effects. Style of clothing in the 
Third Reich was more individual than it's today. I fear that people 
don't recognize what's going on.

Hopefully some of us could keep away this evil from arts ;). For popular 
music we tend to become an evil culture, like there once was because of 
the Italian opera hype. Btw. I guess there's a historical film about a 
castrato for the Italian opera, where they did use Auto-Tune and/or 
similar effects for film sync.

That's too funny.
Ralf
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