Moderator: Andrew
barneyrubble wrote:It's like this.....
Most bands who record highly polished, complex, melodic music use sequenced parts live. That is a fact.
Def Leppard's vocal sequences famously screwed up during the Freddie Mercury tribute gig during Let's Get Rocked and the chorus backing came in out of time.
Rush have sequenced keyboard and bass parts and have used them since 1980 as Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson weren't able to grow more limbs.
The 'taps' during Riverdance are backed up by sequencers.
Journey use sequencers during some songs particularly during choruses because it is normal, in no way is it a scandal because it is done throughout live music and has been the case for years. If a drummer plays to a 'click track' and the band takes a cue to start a song along with that 'click' then it isn't hard to fly in extra parts off of hard disc. The idea is that the audience get a better performance closer to the record and we all go home happy.
All this bullshit about comparing waveforms is simple. Play the songs at exact tempo to the record because the band uses a click and 99% of the time a professional band will be on the money instrumentally and vocally throughout the song unless they jam or adlib a little. I've recorded vocal takes many times in studios (as an engineer not an artist) and had to edit parts from maybe 10 takes of a part of a song by comparing waveforms on a pc screen to 'cut' together the best performance. Sometimes down to part of a syllable from 3 tracks to form one word. The waveforms are so similar that a cut is pretty easy. You'd expect Steve Augeri to produce a waveform similar to 'Generations' from a live bootleg because he is singing the same song at the same tempo for the xxx'th time. Anyone would.
Pneumonia? Anyone had it? Steve Augeri has. Earlier this year and so have I. Any idea how long it takes to fully recover your ability to breathe properly afterwards? After 6 months you begin to get the feeling that you are getting there even with a mild infection as I had in my early 30's.
If I could sing and hit the stage within the first 6 months of recovery I might tail off on the high notes especially during a set of Journey material.
I was in the front few rows at Edinburgh, Manchester and Milton Keynes and yes Steve Augeri didn't nail every vocal. Sometimes he cracked a bit which isn't surprising. As a professional sound engineer for 20+ years I spot things. Hear keyboard parts when the keyboard player is holding guitar or notice 4 part harmonies when only 3 people are on the mic. But it isn't a con, it's part of performing, smoke and mirrors and all that.
Steve Augeri didn't have any guide vocals. When he choked a bit he pulled the mic back and did the best he could, much better than just about any vocalist around today. He has a band around him who produce amazing backing vocals and a drummer who can outsing the majority of singers around today. They probably do 'fly in' some sample harmonies plus the odd bit of keyboards... I play guitar in a wedding band and we do it too!
Cut all this crap and take a reality check. Bands use technology, get over it. If you want it raw then go see Ted Nugent as a 3 piece (really f**kin good actually) or go to your local pub or bar on jam night. If you want to hear Journey and Def Leppard sound full and fantastic then buy a ticket and enjoy.
Last night they played to a half empty house and people are all saying he looked "under the weather" had an "illness" whatever.
barneyrubble wrote:
Steve Augeri didn't have any guide vocals.
He has a band around him who produce amazing backing vocals and a drummer who can outsing the majority of singers around today.
arrivalrules wrote:Last night they played to a half empty house and people are all saying he looked "under the weather" had an "illness" whatever.
Deano you are losing credibility with that statement. The place was freaking packed man. I was in the back of a pavilion with no empty seats and looked out at a crowded lawn.
You are right about a lot of things, but you were not at the show, I was.
Section 202 Row S Seat 72
I was talking about the start of the show. I received two different calls. When they came on, there were less than half the seats taken. Look on DefLeppard dot com...pics during DSB, and there are tons of empty seats.
On a side note, you think Journey actually wanted to go on first, to hide the lipping?
barneyrubble wrote:It's like this.....
Most bands who record highly polished, complex, melodic music use sequenced parts live. That is a fact.
Def Leppard's vocal sequences famously screwed up during the Freddie Mercury tribute gig during Let's Get Rocked and the chorus backing came in out of time.
Rush have sequenced keyboard and bass parts and have used them since 1980 as Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson weren't able to grow more limbs.
The 'taps' during Riverdance are backed up by sequencers.
Journey use sequencers during some songs particularly during choruses because it is normal, in no way is it a scandal because it is done throughout live music and has been the case for years. If a drummer plays to a 'click track' and the band takes a cue to start a song along with that 'click' then it isn't hard to fly in extra parts off of hard disc. The idea is that the audience get a better performance closer to the record and we all go home happy.
All this bullshit about comparing waveforms is simple. Play the songs at exact tempo to the record because the band uses a click and 99% of the time a professional band will be on the money instrumentally and vocally throughout the song unless they jam or adlib a little. I've recorded vocal takes many times in studios (as an engineer not an artist) and had to edit parts from maybe 10 takes of a part of a song by comparing waveforms on a pc screen to 'cut' together the best performance. Sometimes down to part of a syllable from 3 tracks to form one word. The waveforms are so similar that a cut is pretty easy. You'd expect Steve Augeri to produce a waveform similar to 'Generations' from a live bootleg because he is singing the same song at the same tempo for the xxx'th time. Anyone would.
Pneumonia? Anyone had it? Steve Augeri has. Earlier this year and so have I. Any idea how long it takes to fully recover your ability to breathe properly afterwards? After 6 months you begin to get the feeling that you are getting there even with a mild infection as I had in my early 30's.
If I could sing and hit the stage within the first 6 months of recovery I might tail off on the high notes especially during a set of Journey material.
I was in the front few rows at Edinburgh, Manchester and Milton Keynes and yes Steve Augeri didn't nail every vocal. Sometimes he cracked a bit which isn't surprising. As a professional sound engineer for 20+ years I spot things. Hear keyboard parts when the keyboard player is holding guitar or notice 4 part harmonies when only 3 people are on the mic. But it isn't a con, it's part of performing, smoke and mirrors and all that.
Steve Augeri didn't have any guide vocals. When he choked a bit he pulled the mic back and did the best he could, much better than just about any vocalist around today. He has a band around him who produce amazing backing vocals and a drummer who can outsing the majority of singers around today. They probably do 'fly in' some sample harmonies plus the odd bit of keyboards... I play guitar in a wedding band and we do it too!
Cut all this crap and take a reality check. Bands use technology, get over it. If you want it raw then go see Ted Nugent as a 3 piece (really f**kin good actually) or go to your local pub or bar on jam night. If you want to hear Journey and Def Leppard sound full and fantastic then buy a ticket and enjoy.
Rockn'deano wrote:Ok, cool.
Reading different sites, the DL site said it was 80&% DL fans and the Journey site says 70-30 Journey.
They should just do a battle of the bands.
On a side note, you think Journey actually wanted to go on first, to hide the lipping? I am starting to think so now. Because Augeri doesn't need rest anyway, if you know what I mean.
zino wrote:After I saw the way Joe Elliot butchered Rock of Ages on the VH1 Rock-n-Roll thing, I sure hope he does something, cause he was ROUGH
TheOptiMystic wrote:Totally agreed, BarneyRubble. That's why the point of this whole crusade completely befuddles me. The vast majority of touring acts do this exact same thing. It's showbiz. And I stand by one of my earlier posts that I've seen Journey enough times on several tours where Steve has sung things differently to know that the lead vox are not canned.
What I find most (unintentionally) amusing are the issues where Steve sounds "exactly" the same as on the DVD or what not. If this were Perry we were discussing, I'm sure many of the same people slamming Augeri here would be praising Perry for being incredibly consistent with his vocals night after night.
Just my humble opinion. Again, I am standing by the band and Augeri. I've been a fan for way too long to let these accusations bother me, especially when I know (as a musician myself) that fly-ins, samples, DAT BGV's and the like are used all the time by countless other acts. No big deal!
As many others have said, Steve Augeri has done a phenomenal job keeping the band alive. I can only think of one or two other situations where it would be equally as hard to replace a frontman like Perry. It is a completely unenviable position to be in-those were mighty big shoes to fill and in my opinion he has done so with great grace and humility. Let's not forget that Perry had to have these same songs stepped down by the time he was Augeri's age (reference the Bill Graham tribute), so as great of a vocalist as he was, he wasn't able to hit those notes anymore either. And keep in mind that Perry is my all-time favorite vocalist. As I said before, I've had the great fortune of getting to meet the band and they couldn't have been nicer or more gracious to the fans, not the least of which being Augeri. Regardless of the allegations, to attack this man's character is reprehensible in my eyes, as he is simply one of the nicest and most humble guys in the business. Anyone who has met him will tell you that.
The bottom line for me is that this band's music has been the soundtrack for my life for as long as I can remember, and I can never thank them enough for all they've given me and millions of other fans. Even for that alone, I would stand by them. Can't wait to see them rock in September!
barneyrubble wrote:It's like this.....
Most bands who record highly polished, complex, melodic music use sequenced parts live. That is a fact.
All this bullshit about comparing waveforms is simple. Play the songs at exact tempo to the record because the band uses a click and 99% of the time a professional band will be on the money instrumentally and vocally throughout the song unless they jam or adlib a little.
I've recorded vocal takes many times in studios (as an engineer not an artist) and had to edit parts from maybe 10 takes of a part of a song by comparing waveforms on a pc screen to 'cut' together the best performance. Sometimes down to part of a syllable from 3 tracks to form one word. The waveforms are so similar that a cut is pretty easy. You'd expect Steve Augeri to produce a waveform similar to 'Generations' from a live bootleg because he is singing the same song at the same tempo for the xxx'th time. Anyone would.
Pneumonia? Anyone had it? Steve Augeri has. Earlier this year and so have I. Any idea how long it takes to fully recover your ability to breathe properly afterwards? After 6 months you begin to get the feeling that you are getting there even with a mild infection as I had in my early 30's.
If I could sing and hit the stage within the first 6 months of recovery I might tail off on the high notes especially during a set of Journey material.
As a professional sound engineer for 20+ years I spot things. Hear keyboard parts when the keyboard player is holding guitar or notice 4 part harmonies when only 3 people are on the mic. But it isn't a con, it's part of performing, smoke and mirrors and all that.
Steve Augeri didn't have any guide vocals.
barneyrubble wrote:
Steve Augeri didn't have any guide vocals.
StyxCollector wrote:I wouldn't put Journey and Rush in the same league here. Rush has had more of a "back to basics" approach for the past few tours as they readily admit they made stuff so complex it was hard to pull off live. But if Geddy samples stuff he played in the studio and triggers it with a foot or a finger, it's kinda lazy in some points, but I'm OK with it.
Geddy's lead vocals are all 100% live. He croaks at times. Many Rush fans, believe it or not, would prefer them not to trigger the backing vox (a la "Earthshine"), and strip some of the arrangements back even if they are more complex on record.
As the bassist/keyboard player in a Rush tribute band, I have some sequenced parts, but there's no way to do Rush, and songs like "Big Money", without them. In fact, I also can see why he simplifies many things down to one or two key presses.
Journey's music is nowhere near as complex as Rush, and I'm a fan of both bands. Journey should be playing and singing every note live, period. No sequences, no taped vox to fatten things up, nada.
conversationpc wrote:If the allegations are true, the big difference is that Rush has never made a secret of it. It was well known that, beginning in the "Permanent Waves" period, that Geddy was triggering some of that stuff with some kind of a foot pedal. How else could Geddy sing, play bass, and keyboard all at the same time?
StyxCollector wrote:It can be used for good or evil depending on your purpose
conversationpc wrote:StyxCollector wrote:It can be used for good or evil depending on your purpose
Hah! In Rush's case, I would say you're on the good side.
I'm a HUGE Rush fan. Do you have any samples of your music or a web site?
StyxCollector wrote:Here's a link to our clips page: http://phantomfears.com/clips.html
We sound even better (IMHO) than we did when we recorded the stuff that's on there a year and a half ago. I'm putting up new live clips soon from a recent show.
barneyrubble wrote:StyxCollector wrote:
...............what is your take on Def Leppard.
Can you imagine what they sound like without flown in backing vocals?! It's a scary thought isn't it? Imagine Hysteria recorded by a bar band over a weekend and mixed on the Sunday evening after 48 hours drinking and you'd be getting close.
barneyrubble wrote:No Rush are very different I agree. I've seen them every tour since 1981 and they are getting better with age.
If you don't believe Journey shouldn't sequence parts then what is your take on Def Leppard. Can you imagine what they sound like without flown in backing vocals?! It's a scary thought isn't it? Imagine Hysteria recorded by a bar band over a weekend and mixed on the Sunday evening after 48 hours drinking and you'd be getting close.
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