I'd be surprised if he even knew they were coming out on CD at the time | |
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Oh come on. | |
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Like I said, I do think he just didn't give a fuck and passed on the chance of making the recordings louder, but his engineers surely didn't tell Prince to piss off and leave them alone while they handed the masters to WB, knowing they'd use it for CD releases etc. Prince had the last word when it came to submitting material, always. | |
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I can make things louder just by using the volume knob.
Actually I have a slider for that, but you get the point.
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WB already had the masters at the time they came out on CD. They didn't ask Prince for a new copy for CD. They used the same ones that they'd used for vinyl, 8-track and cassette. They're still using them for digital distribution. At the time he submitted that material, they weren't mastered for CD. They didn't come out on CD until the mid to late '80s (most of them the latter). | |
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Oh, I hate house remixes of old songs because the music doesn't sound anything like the original song at all except for the vocal parts. I like remixes like they used to do on 12 Inches back in the 1980s. They were basically the original version but altered with longer intros and breakdowns and maybe a few special effects added on top of the original version. But if it sounds nothing like the original version whatsoever, I don't like it. I love house music but I've found that the only good house songs are songs that were orginally recorded as house songs. Andy is a four letter word. | |
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Audacity is a hideous program, btw.
I do use it sometimes for very simple operations, but there's should be no reason for an audio editor to be as badly written as it. They haven't done anything serious in ages to that program in order to improve it, but people for some reason still like to pretend nothing else is needed as for as free software is concerned. There have been so many times when using the program has made me just angry and frustrated. | |
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same. but it's pretty great for being free. and there are a lot of nice plug-ins. | |
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The way the program handles plugins is as bad as it gets.
No GUIs, a terribly previewing system (no realtime previewing in 2012?) and the plugin formats it supports on Linux (the platform the program has been mainly developed on) are really outdated. The sound server support is a complete mess as well. The developers claim that the program has all kinds of extensive features, but those features are just shoddily implemented and left at a very early stage of development.
I can't myself relate to that "it's great for being free" mentality, because all OSS projects are free and there are a lot of developers that actually care about how well their programs work.
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It totally depends on how you do it. If you use a program that does it for you, you will likely mess with some frequencies to the point of compression. If you take the time to address each track manually it is easy to adjust the volume without any other alterations. With older Prince albums you will also find that all of the songs on the album do not have the same peak level like modern releases. This is good, it allows for an ebb and flow that you can not get with todays standards. Sometimes the music is supposed to be quieter. Knowing this, it is not impossible to raise the volume on the files AND maintain the ebb and flow intended for the album. If you take care to maintain this atmosphere, some songs will still be much quieter than others on shuffle but this is preferable to every song on the album being raised to the same db when that was not the original intention.
I am a "professionally trained audio engineer", and I do know that. [Edited 8/19/12 16:41pm] Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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I prefer Sound Forge, myself. Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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- In the early 80's the loudness wars hadn't really progressed as far as at the end of the 90's - Louder does not mean (technically) better; loudness is mostly a commercial factor - Loudness is annoying; you want quietly mastered music to have true dynamics and to be able to listen for hours comfortably Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. | |
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Different tools for different purposes... SF is still closed source. Audacity is open as it can be. Did you ever use the jack audioconnectionkit? Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. | |
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No I haven't. Good? Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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And why are you telling me this?
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I'm assuming you don't own an iPod or mp3 player? And if you do I'm assuming that you having got any Prince albums on there unless they were bought on iTunes or Amazon etc... Isn't ripping them from CD or recording them from vinyl tampering with the original way it was released because of the technology of that time?
I mean, I understood where you guys were with personal edits without labelling them as such, totally understand that but... you're verging on robotic and senseless with this stuff. You say you have no problem with shuffling, as you said 'why would I?' - well the impression you give is that you think music should be listened to as it was released, so that's why people would think you have a problem with it.
Are we not allowed to turn music up or down, only at the exact volume at which they were 'intended' to be played at? Where does it end? And why can't people make it so that it plays at the same volume as the other music they have in their collection, simply so that they know what volume it's all coming out as?
I have a playlist at the moment that we're listening to whilst chilling out around the pool which consists of Prince, Stevie Wonder, MJ, Marvin Gaye.. and Jazmine Sullivan!
Am I morally wrong? Of course not, I'm sure you'll agree but some of your reasoning would assume so.
Albeit, no disrespect to anyone.
Reminds me of biblical contradictions | |
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As always, it depends on where you draw your line. Like I mentioned earlier, in an ideal musical world for any artist, the artist would decide which song is to be listened in what exact environment (volume, stereo, room etc), but this is practically impossible.
I do own an iPod and I do turn the volume up or down and I also make playlists from time to time, but I do so knowing that I am only using part of the original intent of the artist in order to make use of my (nowadays almost unlimited) power as a listener.
That's why I draw my personal line with editing, changing the mix, structure of a song and all the thing you'd need more to do than a normal stereo. If there was a stereo that could change the mix of a 70s album I just wouldn't use it to do it. If, however, an artist wanted to give that certain power to the listener (as Björk did with her latest album, for instance), that's something different.
Where I draw the line of "personal comfort" to "morally inacceptable action" is when people change finished songs by brilliant artists and put the online saying "now it's better" or even selling them on or publishing them in a way that doesn't make it absolutely clear it's a "fan" edit.
To me, music has a lot to do with trust in the artist; I trust Prince, because I know he's a very accomplished musician. Therefore I take anything he puts out as it is, knowing he knew what he was doing, whether I like it or not. That's why I wouldn't tinker with what Prince himself could have changed. | |
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Now you seem to be contradicting yourself. Before, we said:
It's "morally wrong and disrespecting" for me to make my own playlists, but now you admit you do it?
And, your current explanation of where you "draw the line" of "morally inacceptable (unacceptable?) actions" does not inlude the three actions above that I mentioned and you labeled "morally wrong and disrespecting."
We have discussed the gamut of tweaks in this thread from simple volume adjustments to fan edits, from personal use to sharing and even the effect all this has on the unknowing first time listener. It seems you have gotten confused navigating the topics leading you to contradict yourself.
For the record, I get, and have no problem with your stance on the artists' intentions for their material, and, Prince being my favorite artist, understand your defense of his material. But, I've been a hardcore Prince fan for 30 years, have purchased every official release, most multiple times each, and listened to them in their entirety only God knows how many times. When told I'm morally wrong for making or listening to playlists, mix CDs or shuffle, I'm going to call bullshit. Especially with all the REAL moral ambiguity that comes with being a Prince fan like me (ie: bootlegs!). Considering all the strong arguments on BOTH sides of the bootleg debate, your stance above came across as extremist to me. Now you seem to be backpeddling...
Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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You're right, I was rather referring to the original topic of editing songs, whereas the playlist thing concerns the change of purpose chosen by the original artist, which in my book is cool, as long as you know what you're doing, as in taking your freedom as a consumer completely disregarding the artists original intentions.
The grey area is taking a finished album and changing one or two songs and saying "now it sounds better to me!". Yeah, if it sounds better to you, go for it, but it just hurts a fellow musician to know that someone would simply change your piece of work. It seems heartless to me.
It really depends on the purpose of and reason for any "tweak". If you know an artist wanted a song to be quiet, I do find it morally wrong to make it louder, because you simply disregard the maker's intention and make yourself have the last word, just because you can. If Prince says Lovesexy is meant to be listened to in one take, why wouldn't I do just that? If I don't, it changes the experience and the experience becomes sort of a lie, tweaking it to your own comfort, when art shouldn't always be "comfortable", in my opinion.
Your earlier posts sounded like you were saying that you changed the volume of songs just to make them louder, with little regard to the artistic power dynamics can have in music, just so that the dynamic difference in your playlists is not too vast. If you made Life Can Be So Nice quieter and Venus De Milo louder, so that they can fit into one playlist, I'd at least cringe, and I hope you understand why. | |
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forgot to coment on this earlier..
When the single for Sexy M.F. was released, months before the album, most radio stations didn't have an edited version and had to make their own. My local station played one that had samples from The Simpsons in place of the swears. It was pretty funny. I wonder how many different radio station home-made edits are out there?
Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Don't worry, it's odd to most of us here in the US as well. Lots of uptight people afraid of words but most of us agree with George Carlin. Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Now, you're making more sense to me.
I will, however debate your last paragraph:
A song might meant to be a quiet part of an album, purposely placed between 2 louder songs and meant to be a breather between them. That same song when played in a mix that takes it out of that original context and is not using it for that purpose would sound BETTER if adjusted to the level standards of that particular mix of songs. In other words, the song would only supposed to serve as the quiet part of the album it is on, once removed, that purpose and intent are no longer relevant.
I will agree, that, within the context of the original album, any differences between the levels of the individual songs should not be altered to experience the original presentation as intended. I will argue that outside the context of the original album tweaking to achieve a preferable listening experience is the prerogative of the listener and nobody should have a problem with it.
Cool?
Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Heartless? Morally wrong? I love music to my death and beyond and take music seriously but you're going to some other level, just as djThunderfunk said. It's extremist.
And it isn't 'just because you can', it's for reasons such as not blowing speakers and the practicality of listening to music. And it's not 'now it sounds better to me' it would probably be 'I prefer it this way', like people prefer extended mixes or shorter mixes. One of them has more sections (or less) making them missing something or having extra. You'd say thats okay if the artist released those versions but then who is to say that someone isn't allowed to like one version more than the other?
Why am I, for example, not allowed to say that I'd prefer My Name is Prince without Tony M's rap without being immoral? I have a huge grin as I contemplate that thought... I mean, it's ridiculous and although I should be politically correct and say 'I may be wrong to think it wouldn't be immoral to have that preference', I'm not going to.
And also (although we've touched upon this) I'm pretty positive that Prince would have definitely not wanted 'motherfucker' censored out of 'Sexy MF' as his original intention is for it to be listened to how he wrote it but he obviously knew he would have to censor it for radio. That's not his decision, he knows he HAD to do that. But wouldn't it be immoral to allow the original to be on radio knowing children will be listening? So no matter what you do, going by your logic, you have to perform an immoral action to get it on radio.
And also, people shouldn't ever cover anybody elses song too. Going by your logic. | |
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George Carlin is a God. | |
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At the very least, Genius... Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Thought I might go back to the OP a minute...
Back 10 or 12 years ago when I was DJing in clubs I was initially happy to find the crowds knew of and requested Pussy Control. I thought if they like that they would love some of the other obscure nasty funk jams by Prince that I had. They did not. They were the lowest common denominator types that only respond to what they already know and are used to. It became extremely annoying to not only have to play Pussy Control every night, but sometimes more than once a night. Finally (using Sound Forge, not Audacity) I made my own "remix" via some editing and looping and adding samples and extending portions. It was... interesting. I loved it. The crowds reaction was mixed (the outro was a bit... over the top
A bit after that, I got sick of having to play 50 Cent's 'In Da Club' several times a night. So, I cut a bunch of samples of Family Name from Rainbow Children, re-edited & looped them, mixed in the acapella version of In Da Club and burned a CD.... I loved it because I thought it was hilarious and regardless of how ridiculous it was, it was also a creative idea and came out pretty smooth. The people on the dance floor stared at me like dogs that just been shown a card trick. They didn't get it at all. Or like it. So, anytime they wanted me to keep playing that same damn song they risked me throwing my mash-up version in the mix and so maybe I still ended up not having to play it as much. Good enough.
If anyone can tell me a free and easy way to share, that does not break any org rules, I'm willing. Otherwise, don't ask.
Where's my morals now?
Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Databank, I totally applaud what you say here. Standing ovation for sure!
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My thought on this is this. Suppose a fan edits or remixes a Prince song (or song by ANY artist.) Say, for example, they take When Doves Cry and add their own creative bass line. And for added effect, say somehow during the fan's "remake" they somehow lose the stereo effect and the track becomes mono, which causes it to lose a few layers of background vocals.
Then this new version gets leaked out online. Some kid who has NEVER heard Prince downloads it just to try it out. The kid hears that bassline and is turned-off, thinking that is the real Prince bassline and because it's in mono he misses some crucial vocal parts. He then decides he's given Prince a chance and doesn't like his music, so he never listens to Prince again. Had he heard the REAL version he may have gone on to purchase Purple Rain, went to a live show, read a few books on Prince, heard 4 The Tears In Your Eyes, got into politics and become the future President of the United States and been the first President on Mars! Oh, and cured world hunger.
But instead, he heard the fan mix, thus creating an ALTERNATE reality on the timeline. One in which Biff becomes the mayor of Hill Valley and ZZ Top is played in the streets while the town burns. | |
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