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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: Fake Live Stage Venues
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Dave Williams
Wet nipple scene
Posts: 1836
From: Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Registered: Jan 2000
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posted 03-19-2002 10:53 PM
It is standard for live broadway productions to double mic the performers, giving them two seperate body mics and transmitters, in case one of them dies. What is also standard is to "sweeten" the numbers. The performers come in and record the numbers and this recording is played along with the number live on stage, unless it is a solo number. This is done for one simple reason. Have you ever heard 24 live mics on one confined stage before? If you haven't, feel yourselves lucky. With the sweet track you don't need to have ANY of the mics up during the nubmer. But you still hear the performers singing from the stage, and the sweet track is almost always recorded on the very stage that the performance is on, in order to keep the acoustics more true to form. Unlike britney and janet jackson, and the rest, that use thier studio enhanced tracks for the live show. Makes it sound so unreal. They need to re-record each number live at each stadium before each show, to keep it at least sort of real.The first instance of musical acts using sweetened tracks on live shows that I can recall would have to be Jan and Dean, after that horrible car wreck. But it was soon accidentally revealed during a live show. Wouldn't it be great if the computers shut down on a britney show leaving her with just her voice. To make sure that the truth is out, she does sing during her shows, a total of 10 percent level volume to a 90 percent sweet track. Hey, maybe her body will hold out. Dave
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Paul Mayer
Oh get out of it Melvin, before it pulls you under!
Posts: 3836
From: Albuquerque, NM
Registered: Feb 2000
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posted 03-20-2002 09:23 PM
Dave wrote: quote: It is logistically impossible to run 24 give or take a dozen live mics at once on stage. best to have the performers sing to a pre recorded track of themselves singing on that same stage. Otherwise the feedback loops are so horrendous that all would be bleeding from the ears in seconds.
Not impossible at all. Here, in the case of shows with live orchestras (rare now but still happens), we routinely run with that many mics or more open simultaneously on stage. Yes the feedback nodes can be difficult, but not impossible. Today's signal processing options make it even less impossible. On Starlight Express (1994-1997) at the Las Vegas Hilton we had 30 singers (all on roller skates) wearing RF boom mics, with two handheld RF mics available as spares. The finale and bows had the entire cast on stage singing in unison. Two shows a night, six nights a week, with very few problems. On that show the producers decided there would be no backup tracks--if a mic quit, one of the handhelds would be run out to the perfomer. They even made a point of it by announcing at the top of the show that the entire show was performed live. Admittedly the "orchestra" was three guys playing sampling keyboards all MIDI'd and sequenced together, which resulted in some pretty funny sounds coming from the pit (actually a room backstage) during the occasional MIDI crash. But that's another topic. So in the end one could say that show had at least a partially canned band, but the 30 singers were all live. Paul My favorite Las Vegas soundman's t-shirt, printed by Steve Varner at Local 720: "Everyone in the world knows two things:" "1. Their name" "2. Sound" -0
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Charles Everett
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1470
From: New Jersey
Registered: May 2001
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posted 03-21-2002 05:43 PM
How about the Super Bowl? That's where Whitney Houston did "The Star-Spangled Banner" in 1991 -- during George H.W. Bush's war, Desert Storm.To cash in on US jingoism Arista Records rush-released her Super Bowl performance as a cassette single. A few weeks later the New York Post reported that Ms. Houston never sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the Super Bowl. Why not? She lip-synched! Arista was forced to withdraw that record from record stores. Her career would have crashed had it not been for The Bodyguard. FWIW Arista was also the US label for Milli Vanilli -- whose own lip-synching scam was exposed a few months earlier.
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