All this pitch correction makes me appreciate local live bands even more. It's not always perfect, but it's real and enjoyable.
@yanasto27 күн бұрын
Unfortunately live can be pitch corrected too now
@susantownsend839727 күн бұрын
I’ve had family in New Orleans off an on for over 30 years. Some of them are very musically inclined. We all agree that at any time you can wander into a small bar or cafe and hear incredible voices and instrumentalists. No autotune. No pitch correction. Even their missed notes are glorious. My wish for all of your listeners is to have access to music like that.
@johnnynick617927 күн бұрын
Unfortunately, MOST local live performers today are using pre-recorded tracks AND auto-tune. This is ruining the live music industry for those who have actual ability. It's becoming more difficult for those who have real talent to get decent paying gigs because the talentless masses are selling themselves for absurdly cheap prices and the general public are clueless to how they're being duped.
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
Amen to that!
@stealthis26 күн бұрын
@@yanastoit really shows how little these people know
@willcool71327 күн бұрын
Your analysis used to be an interesting curiosity and fun to train my ear with. But now your channel has become truly important. You're doing important journalism here, investigative musical journalism. Thank you. Please keep documenting.
@russell.holland9 күн бұрын
The weirdest thing about it is that Jacob Collier has, more than any young musician today that I know of, advocated for this EXACT subtlety you are demonstrating here to be embraced, and not "fixed." In a time when nearly everything in pop music is fake, he has stood out as embracing what is real. He has gone on at length for hours in his Logic session videos about how both pitch and rhythm as they exist in real, human music are amazingly rich and don't need to be "corrected" to align with an artificial grid. Not only that, but he understands temperament and has played with it, pivoting to "new"/"nonexistent" keys using just intervals from the first key so that the harmony shifts outside of the equal tempered, A440 world. I am dying to hear him talk about why he did this and what his whole take on it is. He is 100% aware of what is going on, almost certainly more than any of us watching this video. I understand that he also embraces pop music too, with its production techniques, but I still have trouble seeing how he'd think it necessary to pitch "correct" Tori's voice in his own production. Also thanks to whoever requested this. I am a big fan of Jacob and find this really interesting.
@mrswimmyboy3 күн бұрын
Maybe the pitch correction wasn't Jacob's choice.
@karmageddon985622 күн бұрын
"Show your intelligence by showing restraint" is one of the best pieces of advice I ever heard from a vocal coach.
@bhgdetjbngfd29 күн бұрын
It's the imperfections in the human voice that gives it the tonal qualities that make people like Torrie sound so good
@aquamarine99911Ай бұрын
The challenge of a capella is staying on pitch without a supporting instrument. So pitch correction undercuts the "magic" of singing a cappella. it becomes pointless.
@Spo-Dee-O-Dee29 күн бұрын
It means you don't have to pay someone playing the supporting instrument.
@seanbeadles742129 күн бұрын
Actually it’s entirely expected for a capella performances to drift tuning wise. There’s even a term for it, a “comma”. It will eventually sound a bit “off” tuning wise when compared to music with instruments. It even become an issue in mixed performances in situations when the singers sing alone then get accompanied later. Jacob occasionally throws things like 24TET into his work and that’s vastly more difficult to do when doing just intonation a capella. I think that’s why Jacob made the choices he made. You can’t modulate a quarter step when the comma has you 20+ cents off the note in the first place He’s also got perfect pitch iirc, so the commas might be really frustrating to listen to because the pitches don’t match 12TET.
@Proghead8828 күн бұрын
It was all sung very tightly on pitch. Pitch correction was used as an artistic choice. Watch the live version. There is no pitch correction there and it sounds just as good, except more emotionally impactful because it is done in real time with arbitrary timing, as opposed to carefully constructed in the studio.
@bryanleggo348928 күн бұрын
@@aquamarine99911 That may be the big challenge to you but that is hardly the point of a capella at all and Jacob Collier doesn't need pitch correction or auto tune at all yet he's used the latter for effect in ARock Somewhere which is also nominated for a Grammy and he's used choirs like the Aeolians in World O World which should have gotten a nom under Classical. What you find difficult doesn't determine creativity, quality or execution.
@Music_is_Breathing28 күн бұрын
Amen to that!
@russshaber8071Ай бұрын
Fil, you deserve a Grammy for this analysis and reporting. I'll print one for you on my 3D printer.
@HeightsomethinghumanАй бұрын
Fil deserves awards alright, real ones for all the deception he uncovers, as well as the education he provides us subscribers. I have learned sooo much from Fil!
@lonestarbugАй бұрын
Agree.
@1THEMAGUSАй бұрын
russhaber..that is priceless!!!
@alexandergutfeldt1144Ай бұрын
Don't you think a handcrafted, slightly of artistic version, would be more fitting to the topic of this video 😅?
@MichaelJamesWood29 күн бұрын
Great comparison and also funny. Nicely done. 🤣
@wesara972428 күн бұрын
As a person studying classical music (playing the viola specifically) making everything equal temperament is absolutely insane to me. Equal tuning is a compromise for keyboards so the don't have to retune every 5 minutes when the key changes. I play a fret less instrument and my C sharp is tuned differently depending on the context because to be perfectly in tune it changes. Nothing is as magically resonate as a perfectly in tune acapella performance, all the harmonies start really vibrating. And pitch correcting to equal temperament just absolutely crushes the harmonies out of the voices. Tldr. The point of being acapella in my opinion is that you can be perfectly in tune without compromising to equal temperament. And pitch correcting to equal temperament defeats the entire point of not having accompaniment.
@ClaudiaCarranza124 күн бұрын
love you my fellow alto clef person ❤
@tabor50324 күн бұрын
Jacob is a fan of good tuning.
@acai92924 күн бұрын
I find this actually kinda strange as having pitch correction software where you have insanely tight control on the pitch, wouldn’t one actually be tempted to tune it more in tune than equal temperament. 😬
@BarbaraMarieLouise23 күн бұрын
Yes! I‘m an opera singer and from Vienna. We always have to adapt to the different pitches as in Vienna the standard for classical music is now 443 to 446. As I also studied Jazz where you have 440 I did experience the difference for the voice, especially if you are a more dramatic voice. You have to adapt and it’s also a question of vowel, tongue position and sound position in order to be in the perfect pitch for the piece. And normally the voice adjusts quite naturally. As a, let’s say c changes slightly depending on the position in the harmony and the tonality of the piece. Very interesting if you happen to sing more baroque repertoire. There it is always the question in which tonality. The modern standard or the one of the time. So 430 or even 415 and everything sounds different and you really have to train to be able to sing it well. But it’s a really interesting topic.
@acai92923 күн бұрын
@ Yikes 443-446 seems brutal as (at least as far as I know) they used to tune to 43x here in Finland and the pieces written for that pitch had some really tough tenor parts so just imagining having to sing those with a higher tuning gives me anxiety. 😬 Granted my pitching is at a level which I recall my teacher calling “good enough for a singer but you’re definitely not a violinist” so I’d probably just be flat even if the orchestra tuned higher than what I’m used to. 😂
@tala.avraham826529 күн бұрын
As a producer, since I abandoned the pitch corrections and demanded more from the singers I started to get better results.. and the singers are singing better and giving more from themselves…
@richardvoogd70527 күн бұрын
I like the sound of this. As useful technology can be when crafting a recording, the skills of the artists, backed by a suitably skilled production team, matter.
@acai92924 күн бұрын
I both love this approach but also the singer in me is absolutely terrified as knowing that if there’s a “bad note” in a take there’s probably a take where one can Frankenstein it from and/or fix it with melodyne helps getting to a more “relaxed state” when recording and freeing me to focus on the delivery and emotion. So far I’ve gone for a “halfway compromise” where I use some pitch correction but not on every single note and on the ones where I do use it I tune it somewhere towards the halfway point of what was sung and “where the line is”. So basically just tighten it slightly but keep the original performance intact and have the end result sound “natural”. It probably would be fine without any meddling with the pitch but there’s also the fear of “having to comply with industry standards” so I haven’t dared to fully go without melodyne. 🥹
@RupertReynolds196221 күн бұрын
As a computer programmer (and part-time bus driver!) I applaud your stance--partly because I feel 'art' is often the thing that happens in the gap between what the artist desires and what they find easy. Reaching that bit further can be where the beauty shines through. Mechanical accuracy is NOT art. Art is a process.
@nickelndime528 күн бұрын
Years ago I heard Denise Williams sing a gospel song a cappella on the Grammys. It was incredible and the hairs on my arm stood up. The world of music today is a mere shadow of the 1970s and 1980s.
@elizabethmiller729128 күн бұрын
Worse still, is that the music and songs of the 70s and 80s and 90s are being retroactively and posthumously pitch corrected and/or autotuned upon re-releases of albums and when songs are officially uploaded anew to digital platforms and streaming services. Surely we can mount a successful fight to prevent that sort of thing from happening, at the very least! Do you know the song, Nickels and Dimes - a great song recorded by a great Canadian band of the late seventies, PRiSM?
@behindthemirrorofmusic435127 күн бұрын
@@elizabethmiller7291 So that IS happening!! I thought so as some songs sound off when I played them recently but sounded fine when playing a KZbin upload someone created from a record.
@superlove35Ай бұрын
it's like turning real plants into plastic flowers.
@BH-h6lАй бұрын
Great analogy!
@ZER0--Ай бұрын
Guilding a lily...
@lawrencetaylor4101Ай бұрын
...and watering them.
@perielАй бұрын
Good analogy. Can you imagine them putting auto tune or pitch correction on Joni Mitchell? So gross. It’s became “industry standard” 🤮
@Coverswithchords1Ай бұрын
And people do buy it. This is why.
@RachelLWolfeАй бұрын
"So I'm going to jump in here.... immediately..." Say no more sir. 😂
@chthoniapodcastАй бұрын
Couldn't recognise this one as Bridge Over Troubled Waters. It's weird, even as a so-called capella version. Doesn't deserve a Grammy, but then again, the Grammys are more of an industry thing that have to do with sales rather than talent.
@arturwittensoeltner8729Ай бұрын
Cut a fart on record, it sells a million, and you'll get a Grammy for it! If that fart track is featured in enough movies and sells even more millions, you'll get an Oskar on top for best fart in a farty mainstream-film.
@zman558129 күн бұрын
@@arturwittensoeltner8729 She should apologize to farts everywhere for this rendition.
@cedartree81629 күн бұрын
yeah, I'm generally not a fan when these divas load up perfect wonderful songs with runs. In this case, regardless of the quality of her voice, she's ruined a classic song.
@nemocookfan696129 күн бұрын
Please go listen to the Grammy-nominated recording, which this is NOT. This video Fil analyzed is basically a Grammy advertisement. The nominated cover track is incredible - Is it innovative? Yep - but IMO, fully worthy of the original S&G version, which I have long loved.
@junglecat726328 күн бұрын
@@nemocookfan6961 so you think slowed down, pretentiously overdramatic, and digitally processed to sound like a robot is "incredible"?
@IvannaOrtizEncalada10 күн бұрын
What people should know: 1. It's a Jacob Collier arrangement (there's a video where he is guiding her through the recording) 2. Mrs. Kelly is a great vocalist, and you can actually watch a live version of this song on yt. She really doesn't need autotune. 3. Music is subjective. Not everyone is gonna like an arrangement of a song but new perspectives and vision are welcomed.
@ALF88929 күн бұрын
It seems like your making excuses for those two. Can you address the fact that this is just a terrible recording
@nourfayedmusic9 күн бұрын
@@ALF8892you can’t really classify this as an “horrible recording” though. There are interesting choices, from the chord substitutions to the harmonies, as well as the clarity and tone in Tori’s and Jacob’s voice, objectively this is a unique, interesting piece of music. It might not be me or your cup of tea but we shouldn’t toss it just because. I also promise you that Tori Kelly can do this track live, she is an incredible vocalist.
@Kristoff20059 күн бұрын
I think the first point is what people need to realize before mashing on Tori. Collier isn't bad, quite the opposite. However, this arrangement has little to no input from Tori and they literally recorded this in an hour and a half, afaik. I doubt any "soulful" musical decisions could've made in the moment they were recording, therefore, this was all meant to be, a showoff. Was the pitch correction necessary? With Tori's accuracy, absolutely not. Could it have been a choice during the production? Likely, but we'll never know.
@nicholasbartonlaw341Ай бұрын
And there is somewhere some kid in a coffeehouse with an acoustic guitar pouring her heart out performing this song, singing maybe a little flat, maybe a little raw, but singing it earnestly and really connecting with the audience, but who goes on unknown and unheard by the world.
@BH-h6lАй бұрын
A few of my fellow dinos might remember that Queen's first few albums had a little notice on them bragging that no synthesizers had been used in the making of the music. I think that might have been done to showcase the effort they went to in the studio, especially on Queen 2 (probably their most ambitious album) to create effects using only Brian May's guitar genius and analog effects. That disclaimer was dropped later, (maybe Night At The Opera, I don't recall) and they eventually joined the synthesizer trend. I think what we need now is a label that proudly bears a notice that no pitch correction was used in the making of the music. But then again, in this industry lies have become so commonplace it probably wouldn't be true.
@MrOarsonАй бұрын
Boston was the same as late as Third Stage in the '80s.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
You have hit on something here that I think artists with integrity today - those who have been around for decades before the onslaught of pitch correction and new artists - should start doing! Promote your new albums and songs with the publicly and explicitly stated message that you do not use pitch correction and elaborate on the reasons why. I don't understand why great singers aren't doing this now - with regard to album releases and actual live performances, to set them apart from lesser singers. Are they obligated to go along with the industry standards? I guess the answer to that is 'yes' and that it will be hard to fight back against that and buck the trend but that is what has to happen if we have any hope of saving real music from oblivion.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
What saddens me to no end is that Brian May apparently not only approves of pitch correcting Freddie's voice but loves the sound of it. It almost makes me think that we real music lovers may have already lost the fight to save real music from oblivion.
@nessy9022Ай бұрын
Cool idea! I always liked that detail on the packaging. Day at the Races was the last album to feature the disclaimer, although there were still no synths on News of the World and Jazz.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
@@MrOarson Sorry, what is happening here was decidedly NOT happening in the eighties.
@barryrahn5957Ай бұрын
I'm not a fan of people doing runs that go so far from the original melody that you forget what you're listening to.
@alisong232827 күн бұрын
I agree. It's like the way people butcher the Star Spangled Banner! 🇺🇸
@Sesheria127 күн бұрын
Me too Mariah Carey was an early promoter of this.
@bobbwest26 күн бұрын
Runs are gilding the lily, autotuned runs are an abomination. Who thinks this is good? Since when has the music industry become slaves to conformity, no matter how hideous it it.
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
Exactly. Respect the song. I can't stand listening to that way of singing.
@sinhueherrera898426 күн бұрын
@@Sesheria1hmm Mariah Carey did runs that actually went well with the songs, plus don’t forget she is the one who actually writes her own songs too. The difference with Mariah and all these new rnb and pop singers is that they show all these runs out of their huge egos, while Mariah would do runs based on how her voice/feelings were at the moment.
@jennastorm4785Ай бұрын
This isn't vocal runs, this is vocal diarrhea. Just because a singer CAN do this, doesn't mean that they SHOULD do it.
@wernerkl4036Ай бұрын
Vocal diarreh. 😂😂😂😂
@keenanvilАй бұрын
🙄
@ivinceible5962Ай бұрын
Hahahaha. I was about to say vocal vomit.
@Spo-Dee-O-DeeАй бұрын
In ornamentation, taste is as important as agility.
@angelabrolund1373Ай бұрын
Yes, I would say vocal gymnastics. Also sounds more like pitchy not pitch corrected.
@Kohbruh22 күн бұрын
As a musician i appreciate runs because it showcases the artists knowledge of theory. I really love it when artists and musicians incorporate obscure scales and color
@theTrend722 күн бұрын
99% of the people in this comment section hate runs etc,because of who is doing it,but they won't be honest about it. Agree with you good runs say so much about a great vocalist and how much work they've put into their craft
@HallieWiseleyCraig20 күн бұрын
@@theTrend7So disliking aimless vocal gymnastics is racist now? 😂
@Kohbruh17 күн бұрын
@@HallieWiseleyCraig calling them aimless may mean you don't have sight of the target. Just a thought. Don't forget music is art, art is subjective. Judging by your pretentiousness you must be a musician too. 🤣🤣🤣
@justintime4200014 күн бұрын
I’m a singer and I hate excessive runs. They distort the melody and do nothing except show a vocalist’s flexibility/facility. I studied opera as a coloratura so I understand the importance of vocal facility but it’s not as beautiful or heart wrenching as singing a melody straight and holding out notes. A few well placed runs are more impactful than phrase after phrase of them. At least to my sensibilities. Today singers are over-reliant on runs. It’s a matter of taste I suppose. Whitney Houston would be lost in today’s excessive run vocal culture if she were still with us. To me, it’s not a good thing when speed and excessive notes overshadow the beauty and feeling in slower melodic phrasing with some phrasing being faster/more notes. I feel the same, whether it’s a lead guitarist playing or a singer singing. Sometimes less really is more.
@Kohbruh14 күн бұрын
@@justintime42000 that's a fair assessment. I often view it as a showcase of learned skill and talent. Sort of like a slam dunk contest. I wouldn't want to watch a game of dunks but it's fun to watch guys jump out of the gym. I watched Kelly Clarkson's version of a Jazmine Sullivan song where she did virtually none of the runs Jazmine is known for and appreciated the straight forward approach almost as much as the original. There is a time and a place for it I suppose. I will say that it's often overused to cover up the inability to sustain pitch, and that is indeed bothersome.
@andrewmole74528 күн бұрын
I really like the way that you praise their evident talent, and I think it is really important that we consider when a pitch-corrected song is no longer truly “a cappella”.
@canturganАй бұрын
They should have an 'Assisted Performance ' category in award ceremonies. That would be interesting.
@rowanchandler6841Ай бұрын
100% yes.
@PrometheanRisingАй бұрын
And the vocal award for the vocalist who cannot really sing goes to...
@wernerclarssen293929 күн бұрын
👍 New category: Songs without autotune
@zipitrik129 күн бұрын
If you do this 0 songs will be in other categories since 100% of songs of 100% of artist are touched. Whenever you don't ear it , that just means they did it properly and with caution but I can assure you that every artist big enough to be in an award ceremony is retouched nowadays....
@sootikins29 күн бұрын
Something like the special olympics of music?
@itwasntme8770Ай бұрын
Never mind pitch correction, it’s a woeful bit of soulless screeching . Warbling up and down 3 or 4 notes when one would have done.
@augustsnowfall5189Ай бұрын
Yea, even with pitch correction it sounded off and it was out of place regardless!
@kelson63100Ай бұрын
Omg…exactly! Emotionless, over-the-top…just because you can, doesn’t mean you should. Ugh!
@Terri_MacKayАй бұрын
Oh, that warbling up and down notes, so that a singer can "show off" their chops, drives me crazy. It's unnecessary, irritating to listen to, and just drags out a song for no reason. It's like listening to a singer try to make the Star Spangled Banner "their own". This version is terrible, like she's made it so much more complicated than it should be, instead of singing a clean version that shows off her natural voice. She may have a great voice, but this video wouldn't make me want to listen to anything else by her.
@petermcmillan3446Ай бұрын
As Salieri said: 'Too many notes!'
@ClodhoppingАй бұрын
Melisma
@guyjiminjapan9824Ай бұрын
Pitch corrected or not, to my ears this was a real hatchet job on a beautiful song.
@BlessYourHeart254Ай бұрын
100%
@grmmmmhpph29 күн бұрын
Multi-octave runs do not improve the original.
@bradnelson359529 күн бұрын
That's the elephant in the room. That was a horrible performance.
@MaxG-jk8ty29 күн бұрын
I heard it on his channel and turned it off midway. I almost felt insulted. I generally enjoy his insights and have been subscribed for years. I think he got lost in his vision and stubbornly continued. Definitely disappointing regardless.
@carriejones223128 күн бұрын
I didn't know this happened and I wish I had never heard it. That was an abomination of a beautiful song. She sounds so plastic.
@abramfoster229 күн бұрын
I'm a musician who appreciates this version and also who prefers the original, although I dissent from and am somewhat shocked by some of the remarks in this extremely aggressive comment section. A lot of the information out there about pitch correction is wrong, and while nothing in this video seemed incorrect to me, it confirms biases that I think may be based on misinformation. For whatever it's worth, I'd like to share a few observations. 1. I'm not certain, but the audio in the video seems like it's been thru some post-processing beyond this record as one can hear it on streaming (even if it's just aggressive video compression or weird file conversion) and ultimately I think these vocals sound more unnatural in this video than they do on the record. 2. We live in an era of higher-fidelity audio than we did when Simon & Garfunkel recorded their version, with the possibility of much greater sonic specificity, and unedited vocals just don't fit in to those incredibly specific arrangements of sound in the way edited vocals do. Listening to a lot of this sort of recording has sensitized a lot of ears, particularly younger ears, to subtleties of pitch to a point where people however consciously expect perfect pitch accuracies from pop recording artists. 3. Thus, just about *everything* even remotely tied to popular music nowadays is pitch edited. Even when artists sing live, they often sing with live auto-tune, including older artists who may have originally recorded without pitch-correction but may not have the vocal control they used to. 4. Singing with pitch correction does *NOT* mean the artist can't sing without it. Look at the Tiny Desk concerts for proof of that-- but note that those are live acoustic arrangements which aren't as aesthetically associated with pitch-perfect vocals 5. While there are some artists such as Billie Eilish who have made it part of their brand that they don't pitch correct their recordings, this does not mean the vocal isn't edited. Pitch-edited or not, vocals are almost always "comped" by stitching together parts of different takes to really put the best foot forward. They were even doing some of that back when Simon & Garfunkel were recording! Very occasionally an artist will nail the vocal in one take (I think there are a couple Adele songs like that) but that's an exception and nobody really assumes that's going to happen when they go into a recording studio. 6. What always matters isn't *that* it's pitch edited, what matters is *how well* it's pitch edited -- including all popular a cappella recordings (Pentatonix, etc.). It's much easier to snap a note right to the equal temperament pitch (because there's an algorithm that does that for you) than it is to shape the line in a way that seems more human, for which you have to go in and address each note (or even parts of each note!) individually. Since Collier produces extremely maximalist music, and often stacks his own vocals in the hundreds, he may have judged that his time was better spent elsewhere and opted for a faster approach with tuning this vocal 7. Tori Kelly has since sung this live but was learning this part as she recorded it, and didn't have the time to practice it as she went. She's a professional and is accustomed to having her vocals edited, and so undoubtedly focused in this recording session on the nuances of her vocal which can't be fixed in the computer such as timbre, breathiness and vibrato-- over pitch accuracy, which can. And as to people's gripes with the riffing: Is this arrangement overly flashy? Is Collier's maximalist choral arrangement out of sorts with the R&B vocal stylings of the soloists? That's up to you and anyone else to decide. But don't dismiss Collier for trying something different. You don't get any of the music you *do* like without a great deal of experimentation, and whether this cover works for you or it doesn't, you can't deny that Collier and his collaborators are great experimenters and even if they never hit something you like, they might inspire someone who will. I recently finished Malcolm Gladwell's audio book interview/career retrospective with Paul Simon, Miracle and Wonder-- and Simon talked about several different versions of this song, and how it lead him into a decades-long struggle to pen an arrangement for the song he thought his own vocal would fit well into, which ultimately is wildly different from the arrangement Art Garfunkel sang on. A pop song isn't a piece of classical music with one "correct" way to perform it, and it's the culture of reinterpretation and experimental trial and error that make that song stand the test of time. "Bridge Over Troubled Water" is a great song, and if you prefer the original, no one's taking the original away from you. Go listen to it!
@elizabethmiller729129 күн бұрын
A truly excellent comment that was a distinct pleasure to read! I'm going to digest this for a while. Would love to see this one 'pinned' to the top of this comments section because that is where it belongs. Thanks!
@joeflip299329 күн бұрын
Pitch correction sucks. The original didn't need it. Like Fil said, she's better than this, even if I don't like this version. You may think thiis is normal, but my friend it's unnatural
@elizabethmiller729127 күн бұрын
Where did your point #8 and #9 go? Re. #8: I would just say that it's one thing to use pitch correcting your own vocals as a way to improve your pitch accuracy but it's quite another to keep using it and never let us hear your unedited vocals. As Fil said, it okay to pitch monitor your vocals to help you get to a high level of pitch accuracy. But, once you get there, burn your pitch monitor and leave it behind for good! :) Re. #9: I can't agree that all pitch correction does is make music accessible to more people. Pitch corrected vocals, when we are talking about a great singer, leaves out all that makes a great singer's voice beautiful and unique and expressive - all the things that allow a human listener to connect on an emotional level with a human voice.
@abramfoster226 күн бұрын
@@elizabethmiller7291 My mistake! If anyone's looking, the big thing I added was an analogy to the innovation of the microphone for non-operatic live singing. Responding to your point, the big thing which I think this misses is the fact, as I said before, that a good pitch edit (even in the cleanest pop music) doesn't snap everything to equal temperament and is supposed to be relatively transparent. And, as I'll get to in a minute, on a more fundamental level it kind of can't. When I edit vocals for production my goal is always to accentuate and reveal those things that makes a singer's voice beautiful and unique and expressive. That's FAR from only pitch. Think about how much can be added emotionally to a performance by a mix engineer with a fader-- one can influence the actual phrasing of the music that way, or even create phrasing where there isn't any! Not to mention my aforementioned set of things that can't be edited in the computer at all-- breathiness, timbre and vibrato-- which are crucial to a performance and some of the main things a great singer in any genre/style may be manipulating consciously through their vowel shape and "placement." But also when you get down to the nitty-gritty of it, if you snap a note to the equal temperament pitch in melodyne you're only snapping the average pitch of the vibrato to that note-- the actual pitch of the vocal will only be exactly on the equal temperament pitch in a tiny fraction of the samples in the audio file, even if the vocalist is singing relatively "straight-tone." And the human ear perceives pitch accuracy much more with the loudest parts of the note, (and sometimes the end of the note) so even if you want a vocal to sound like perfect equal temperament, sometimes snapping the average pitch of the note to a pitch doesn't actually sound like the desired pitch and you have to go in and adjust to the more important parts of the note. Of course, if one wanted the auto-tune T-Pain/Cher effect that's still available, but that's not what anyone's discussing in this comment section. Personally when I have the time (which I sometimes don't) I try to edit lead vocals just with my ear, by starting and stopping and fixing notes that sound off-- without watching the precise pitch of the line. And if I do edit a note, I bear in mind where it's sitting. If a singer's already right in the ballpark of the just intonation pitch (most importantly -14% of a semitone for major thirds and +2% of a semitone for fifths) I may try to honor that tuning or sometimes tune it to halfway between there and equal so the vibrato regularly hits both tunings. And with background vocals, if they're very straight-tone I do sometimes tune things specifically to more tempered tunings if that's a color I'm looking for. But as per the advice of legendary a cappella mixer Ed Boyer I try not to worry too much about systems of tuning there, because the vibrato will generally encompass both tunings anyway and there are many more pressing issues to worry about, such as nasty out-of-sync vibrato and messy glide and phrasing that can really ruin the cohesion of a background part, and can even alter the perception of the identity of the chord or even the mode-- especially when you're working with multiple vocalists rather than one stacked vocalist (which is the case when you'd most need to worry about it sounding "synthy"). What BGV editing always comes down to is that vocalists can adjust to each other very precisely in a room to make a chord "ring" but if you want the highest fidelity audio of that performance and any flexibility in the mixing stage you really need to record everyone individually, which loses all the natural adjustment people would make to one another and *must* be compensated for in the editing stage if you want the vocals to be up to professional standards. Note that although there are professional chamber singers who record all together as a group, they aren't trying to emulate the sound of instruments the way contemporary a cappella singers do-- which requires much more finesse in the mixing stage to land properly when you're right up close to the vocal the way you are in a recording. Many of the most famous and revered pop vocal producers today (Kuk Harrell, Max Martin, etc.) are singers themselves (Kuk Harrell has said it's impossible if you aren't one!) and editing allows them to collaborate with the singer on the interpretation of the vocal on a very precise level. There are also some singers (Ariana Grande for instance) who like to be completely in control of their own vocal production and again, that's about getting the interpretation of the song up to the standards of one's ear beyond what one can achieve exclusively with one's instrument (in this case one's voice). There's a thousand things in recorded music which go beyond the specificity of what can be achieved live-- why should there be a double standard for vocal pitch?
@elizabethmiller729126 күн бұрын
It's not a double standard. Changing vocal pitch is not like any other vocal effect. It is not enhancing a vocal but rather changing the voice itself into something that didn't exist. Worse, it is removing all the attributes of a great singer's voice that give it unique personality, expression and emotional storytelling capacity - all of the things that make connecting with a song on an emotional level possible for real music lovers. I'll be back later with a more comprehensive response to your latest non-brief comment! So glad there are no word limits here, self-imposed or otherwise. 😁
@michaelkrawczyk671529 күн бұрын
Wow Fil, you are beyond kind, when I close my eyes, I hear a sack of kittens heading down river
@robertbrowne108425 күн бұрын
Lol
@vidthreenorth4007Ай бұрын
Actually, I didn't like it anyway. The arrangement was overdone and missed the soul of the song. I would not care how "good" the voices were, it was tasteless.
@Amaranthine1000Ай бұрын
I agree, it seemed more like vocal acrobatics rather than emotive singing with feeling. The pitch correction just made it even worse.
@somewhat.random29 күн бұрын
If you listen to anything by Jacob Collier, you'll realize where that comes from. He does this kind of thing all the time, where he allows his supreme technical ability to completely destroy the artistry(soul) of the music. He's got a version of Billy Joel's "And So It Goes" that his fans crow about, and it is one of the worst things I've ever heard. Why? Because he takes something that is beautiful BECAUSE it's simple, and needlessly adds meaningless complexity. This all goes back to Collier, and his particular style.
@stacyrynd711028 күн бұрын
I heard Johnny Cash and Fiona Apple do this song yesterday. It was a treat.
@ashildrtheswift302827 күн бұрын
Yeah, it was way too much
@gunther402426 күн бұрын
@@Amaranthine1000 Yes, 100%.
@BH-h6lАй бұрын
"Everything is possible, but nothing is real" - Living Colour 'Type', 1990
@ilangayouthdanceco.3621Ай бұрын
Sounds like she is practicing her scales and arpeggios. To be honest, not really my favourite version of a superb song, but could accept it if it sounded like a human was singing it with emotion, rather than singing it like an exercise in vocal gymnastics.
@prestwickpioneer3474Ай бұрын
I'm almost scared to say her voice does nothing for me. Rather see Shara Nova singing this.
@moopet8036Ай бұрын
I've never understood the trend for vocal runs like, "how many notes can I fit into this space".
@abc456fАй бұрын
It's just too much. I'd rather listen to Karen Carpenter, any day.
@stevepower1372Ай бұрын
I was hoping there would be a comment like this, cos I couldn't quite pull the right words together. There's no doubt she has vocal skills, but this version of BOTW is (for me) quite awful, just warbling unecessarily around the already beautiful melody.
@BlueM-o2bАй бұрын
Aw, I posted my good comment saying this in reply to someone else. But another tick in the column of those who want to hear a song (especially in a ceremony to "honor" it) than some girl repeating several words just to ride the vocal escalators as if to avoid boredom. What a slap in the face for this incredible song.
@WoodlandT28 күн бұрын
It’s really misguided that so many comments are attacking Tori, accusing her of ruining this classic tune. She was singing exactly what Jacob wrote for her to sing, verbatim. None of this was her creation. I know people have very divided opinions about vocal runs. And that’s fair. But these runs aren’t even representative of the way she utilizes runs in her own music. Tori uses them heavily, but she has great musicality and an astonishingly agile voice. All these “bizarre” and unexpected runs are a product of Jacob’s creativity, not Tori’s. So why is everyone attacking her? Make it make sense
@douglascaskey730227 күн бұрын
Because any self respecting artist would have said "NO... I'm not singing it that way."
@colinmcmb26 күн бұрын
So it's a joint enterprise fuckup?
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
@@douglascaskey7302 Just what I was going to say. She obviously approves because she sang the way she was told to.
@HughConnor200126 күн бұрын
@@douglascaskey7302 Out of interest, have you listened to the song or have you just seen what's in this video?
@CabinetPlasma-q8z25 күн бұрын
women are easy to hate that's why
@tussk.Ай бұрын
When I was studying for my diploma in music production, one of the very first things my tutor told me was that Melisma is a warm up technique, not a singing style, and that you should never _ever_ pitch correct a singer that can actually sing. He used Bob Dylan and Mariah Carey as the example of why you should leave the vocals alone. Bob for his natural off key wailing, and Carey as an example of how a great singer gets autotuned and uses eight notes where one would be more effective. Sadly, that's become the industry standard now.
@arvidlinden5292Ай бұрын
If the Formula 1 drivers had computers driving their cars for them, correcting any small mistake and teaching itself the course, would anyone accept it?
@michelvanbriemen3459Ай бұрын
That's exactly why they banned traction control in F1 after running it for some years.
@alanmon2690Ай бұрын
Or you take a very difficult examination to become a medical profeseional and all your answers are corrected by AI.
@TheBrubaker2Ай бұрын
Like changing gears?
@Spo-Dee-O-DeeАй бұрын
@@alanmon2690 AI assisted surgery is already a thing. Learning to work with it is becoming more important than memorizing volumes of facts that can be found easily on a phone today.
@RichardSFordАй бұрын
@@TheBrubaker2 Semi-automatic gearboxes should have been banned when they came out in '89. Changing gear was once an integral part of driving the car. Now they just bang down the gears effortlessly like they are using a Playstation controller. All the skill is gone.
@ebojagerАй бұрын
Great video, loved the Actual Voice segment, really shows the differences in what your saying.
@rowanrobbinsАй бұрын
I don't know how Fil got through this hideous catterwalling mess! I don't even recognize this as the song it's supposed to be!☹🙉
@paulburley74567 күн бұрын
I'm so glad I stumbled across this video, nicely presented, respectful and informative. You can see your passion and confidence In front of the camera as the video goes on. Looking forward to exploring more of your vids
@ideasmatter473729 күн бұрын
I have told people I don’t like acapella groups, but I’m realizing it’s the pitch correction that gives it an unnatural buzzing sound that makes my ears and nose and eyes itch! I can listen to old recordings of choirs and barbershop quartets without any symptoms at all!
@blinksmomАй бұрын
To all vocal artists out there… When you post your music that is NOT pitch corrected let us know about it. Say so because that is the rarity now days. Why not advertise the fact you don’t use it. It will become a selling point. We will have folks like Fil to keep you honest. I can see a day coming where all posted music will be required to list the ingredients in the meta data as to what filters they used , if its auto tuned or pitch corrected and so forth - Just like on a can of soup….
@SevennahAlyse29 күн бұрын
I'm learning to sing and have posted a few songs to my channel as I chart my progress. Thanks to watching Fil for a long time now, I don't use pitch correction and do state this fact in the descriptions of my cover songs. I also do a kind of ingredients list, showing what I have done in production to get the sound, to sound, as it does.
@laurakelseymusic29 күн бұрын
I don’t pitch correct! 🎉
@blinksmom28 күн бұрын
@@laurakelseymusic I just checked you out. What a beautiful voice. Can’t believe you don’t have more views or subscribers. Soulful and easy listening Linda Ronstadt vibes.
@blinksmom28 күн бұрын
@@SevennahAlyse Ahhh honey looks like you just started. You have in interesting almost old timey French singer tone to your voice. It’s just the beginning of your journey. Keep it up and enjoy the learning process. I am 67 years old and just started my journey to learning the drums LOL. My goal is to learn Enter the Sandman by Metallica! If I accomplish my goal I’ll die a happy grandma!
@laurakelseymusic28 күн бұрын
@ That’s very kind of you, thank you!
@Steph-o5sАй бұрын
Sorry to say she just mangled a classic.
@markorchard2272Ай бұрын
For sure her voice is impressive..... but she is MURDERING this song.
@zebpettyninja29 күн бұрын
@Steph-o5s yup, it's the "simple ", beautiful melody of the original song that does it for me. This cover is just like showing off how cool they are.
@danieltalebi104029 күн бұрын
why are you saying she as if she composed this? this was jacob collier's production, she sang it excellently
@bryanbrock429829 күн бұрын
I find it absolutely mesmerizing
@hhoi822529 күн бұрын
She performed the arrangement, which is Jacob's. He has a kind of cold eye toward meaning and often sacrifices it for technical achievement. So this is, unfortunately, representative.
@chillnophone2024Ай бұрын
Keep up your great work❣️💯 It matters to so many of us❣️💙 Thanks, Fil❣️🎯
@maureendrozda9960Ай бұрын
YESSSS!!!✊✊✊
@chrissymoss514Ай бұрын
A capella is, excuse the pun, music to my ears. A pitch corrected version is so wrong that I have no words to express my feelings!! Give me a song full of soul and heart and emotions and I'm hooked. Thanks Fil, this was, as usual, a five star video 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
@Thishandleistakenbutwhocares14 күн бұрын
Pitch corrected or not, to my ears this was a beutiful rendition of this song!
@MrClassicmetal10 күн бұрын
OH really?
@michaelnaretto3409Ай бұрын
In my opinion, she destroyed a classic.
@rkk578Ай бұрын
I have never understood this fetish of this "Mariah Carey-type" million notes and slides all over the place for no reason other than to people praise them for their singing abilities.
@arnewoodmanАй бұрын
Have to agree, the arguments about pitch correction aside, its not an enjoyable cover, however talented they are as singers.
@cooljp1531Ай бұрын
This is an example of polishing a turd. It is a turd ( not the song, their version of it ) to begin with then you polish it ( pitch correct ) and you have a polished turd. And no she can't sing. Somebody who cannot understand how to sing is not a good singer no matter how high a note you can hit. This is equivalent to a fast guitar player just running up and down a scale as fast as possible with zero phrasing.
@Bellbird-y9gАй бұрын
@@rkk578 I agree with the Mariah reference. I sometimes wonder if these people can sustain a straight note. Even so, to be using this particular technique 30 years on from Mariah's Vision of Lunch is just silly. It's a thing that's been done and done and no one is impressed anymore.
@corneliapopescu52Ай бұрын
@@Bellbird-y9g OUI ,d'accord avec vous ! Quand 26:55 c'est trop c'est trop ! Ça gâche tout ! Pour moi c'est même agaçant !!! Nelly, Belgique. 😊
@smkh2890Ай бұрын
The final demand of The Party was "Do not believe your ears !"
@seanbeadles742129 күн бұрын
1984 is when auto tune
@SuziQ.28 күн бұрын
@@seanbeadles7421, Idk if you’re trying to add to the big brother theme, but auto tune was introduced at the end of 1997.
@trekkiejunkАй бұрын
Even if she wasn't pitch-corrected, i couldn't stand listening to her sing. I can barely hear the song with her trying to show off with her goofy ups and downs all over the place. Just sing the damn song, and sing it well!
@MICHAELMcCARTHY-h7fАй бұрын
Well said. To be honest, I didn't recognise the song...the beautiful song!
@Milin1977Ай бұрын
Agreed
@WoefulMinionАй бұрын
Jacob was feeding Tori sections of the runs, so it's not just Tori. It's Jacob's arrangement. He's very talented, but I don't feel this piece honors the spirit of the song.
@margieguild519Ай бұрын
Total ruination of a truly beautiful song. Art Garfunkel's version is so perfect that this is an abomination. Change for the sake of being different. Just awful.
@rambler5766Ай бұрын
Listen to Sissel and Russel Watson's version of this song. No comparison.
@brianlojeck28 күн бұрын
Some songs are so well done, the first time, that NOBODY needs to try and cover them. Even Paul Simon's solo version of "Bridge" pales in comparison to the Simon and Garfunkel version.
@lmullens75Ай бұрын
Did you see Lady Gaga's interview recently with Rolling Stone? She was going over the behind the scenes production of "Disease" and talking about using Melodyne (how's it spelled?) to make it sound more poppy and dance/dj style (paraphrasing). I thought it was amazing that the artist talked about having her own vocal auto-tuned for the sake of the style of the song. I mean, she's amazing and has sung the song stripped down, but the full on dance version on the album lent itself to auto-tune.
@Mandy7D7Ай бұрын
She's always up front about things. Sometimes painfully so 😆 but she's very real. And with a voice she could've done anything with. A fantastic artist and person.
@yvonnevanwaegeningh-tiggel457729 күн бұрын
For a dance version of the song, just using it as a cool special effect, I totally get it. So glad they were also very honest about it. That's how it should be. A great example for others...
@richardjones324229 күн бұрын
Alicia Keys said something similar. She also adds it to the notes of songs she has used on. No deception. Both Lady Gaga and Alicia Keys can sing. It doesn't make them better except in occasions for style but not as vocalists.
@felixmarques29 күн бұрын
It makes perfect sense. Some genres of music have a very industrial quality, and snapping the notes into the grid works better than otherwise. You want to be extremely precise with tuning, especially in order to get specific timbres when you're doubling takes, getting it to blend with synths… and it's not even necessarily about making the pitch “perfect”-I've used Melodyne to fine-tune my vocals and sometimes it's actually about getting them a little sharper or flatter than perfect for expressive or flavorful reasons.
@snagletoothscott3729Ай бұрын
"This is the worst rendition of of an S&G song I';ve ever heard. You literally could not make it any worse" Some producer at a computer "Challenge accepted!!!"
@Spo-Dee-O-Dee26 күн бұрын
Liberace says "Hold my Champagne! I'm feelin' GROOOOVY!!!!"
@Dan-dg9piАй бұрын
At one point in our past, music used to sound beautiful. Does anyone else remember that too?
@DAVID-io9njАй бұрын
Still many great musicians performing. Just not on MSM.
@credenza1Ай бұрын
Think of a simple, flawed voice like Marianne Faithful, or the intimate revelations of Joni Mitchell, or even the raw and unfiltered wailings of Joplin. This woman's perfromance is perfectly awful.
@Dan-dg9piАй бұрын
@@DAVID-io9nj I think the current musicians who are great are not the ones that the music industry spends all the money on to autotune and pitch correct. What baffles me is that 50 years ago, the top pop singers were at least easy to listen to even if one liked a different genre. The top of the pops today are just - for the most part - unlistenableBut as you say, some of the indy bands are really good and talented..
@RobertoCarlos-tn1iqАй бұрын
music peaked in the 1950s with american jazz. after that . . . john lennon - double track vocals beach boys - electronic synthesizers led zeppelin - 24 track overdubs justin beiber - auto tune.
@jeskeepinitrealАй бұрын
a pale soulless ghost of Art Garfunkle's work tbh
@CraftAeroАй бұрын
Yep. Pitch correction aside, "vocal control" doesn't mean adding multiple notes and slides where there were none. Art could hit AND hold the notes... THAT is vocal control.
@spiderlily4386Ай бұрын
@@CraftAeroTrue. The simplicity of Garfunkle's rendition is a large part of its beauty.
@TheGreatAtarioАй бұрын
*Garfunkel
@filton12Ай бұрын
"Soulless" is a perfect description.
@hoosierbud704Ай бұрын
one of the most amazing vocal sounds I have ever heard is Art's first line of this song....."When your down....." It is AMAZING. I've listened to it over and over.....
@dawnlemasney536627 күн бұрын
In classical singing, we sometimes use overtones to affect pitch perception. The fundamental pitch is just one piece of the sound. As i watch your videos, i often wonder what these sounds would look like on a vocal spectrograph. Thanks for bringing this to light!
@Epic5018 күн бұрын
indeed, seeing a waterfall alongside this pitch tracking fundamental line would be very interesting
@TheAshumms6 күн бұрын
Check out spectrograms like Voice Print or Voce Vista and you can see the overtones :)
@TheDisturbedBaboonАй бұрын
Tori Kelly : I made an a cappella song Freddie Mercury : Hold my 5 parts harmony
@kevonwill578318 күн бұрын
She didn’t make it she sung it do your research. She didn’t create the arrangement look it up it’s on the internet for free. :)
@MGrayl-ib5foАй бұрын
I didn't even need to see the lines - it SOUNDS pitch-corrected.
@OneCatShortOfCrazyАй бұрын
it's really not very nice to listen to, so I really don't understand why it's used so much..
@MGrayl-ib5foАй бұрын
@@OneCatShortOfCrazy I can hear it a mile off & it's so fatiguing to listen to - especially when it's done badly - one dodgy transition between notes can ruin the whole thing. And the ironed-out tone is foul.
@RevMАй бұрын
@@OneCatShortOfCrazy It's not only "not very nice", it's unlistenable.
@JayBigDadyCy21 күн бұрын
Yeah it sounded to me the first time I heard it too. And I was in the comment section and people were literally raving about Tori's verse and how incredible it was and I was like. Yeah it's really good but it's pitch corrected and people jumped me for it. And I was baffled because it just sounds so obvious to me as a musician for 30 years. But I guess if you're of a younger generation and it's all you've ever heard is pitch correction, pitch correction, pitch correction. Then it's really hard to discern when it's not.
@MGrayl-ib5fo21 күн бұрын
@@JayBigDadyCy and it's no wonder that cases of vocal injury amongst young singers are happening more & more as they try to emulate their "idols".
@johnwest7993Ай бұрын
Pitch correction turns boiling music into 'simmering' music. How to turn the human voice into a digital musical instrument. It's artificial and dead.
@abc456fАй бұрын
It's a MIDI vocal, basically.
@Bellbird-y9gАй бұрын
There is absolutely zero need for the "runs", it gives me the runs. It's obscene overuse of melisma and has no place in this beautiful song. She's FUBARed it. She's telling the world that her voice skill is more important than the song. I stopped watching this vid and went to find the performance and what an unmitigated disaster it was. I haven't heard of this girl before today and based on this performance I'll not listen to her again. This is not music, this is grandstanding.
@prestwickpioneer3474Ай бұрын
Well put. Its awful.
@ThatRipOffАй бұрын
Agreed. Pitch corrected or not is still sounds horrific. Her voice is absolutely amazing, but I just cannot stand vocal runs.
@ptsdsucks9069Ай бұрын
Agree, those runs are way over the top, annoying.
@SaltyFlatEarthАй бұрын
Amen!
@Bellbird-y9gАй бұрын
@@l_ha3er1n_ Her/their treatment of a remarkably beautiful, classic song is what's grotesque. It's unnecessarily overblown. In my view the only redeeming feature is that S&G will be earning royalties.
@caroliamurri3872Ай бұрын
Fil, I'm learning so much from your analyses! Thank you for showing a lay person what an unfortunate way music is being sung. 💓
@Invisible-Rhino29 күн бұрын
"I made this acapella performance with my mouse and software - GIVE ME AN AWARD !"
@TTykwer28 күн бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@TripleGeminiLifeАй бұрын
"Ain't nothing like the real thing baby" and "Is it Live or is it Memorex?" comes to my mind as a Seattle rocking teenager in the 1970s-to this day. Keep(ing) it REAL ❤️🔥
@elizabethmiller729127 күн бұрын
Ever get up to Vancouver during those heady days!?
@universalassociates6857Ай бұрын
It’s time for a massive letter writing emailing social media campaign address to the producers the artists, the record companies and everyone else involved the Grammys, the AMAs the CMA’s complaining about this disgrace and demanding change!
@paulwilson6260Ай бұрын
Sign me up
@Kat-I-am3333Ай бұрын
As if... 🥴 (It's by design, wakey wakey)
@jesusislukeskywalker4294Ай бұрын
🙏 support independent music .. before we lose it completely ☝️
@timshort3220Ай бұрын
I feel sorry for the song. With or without pitch correction.
@Menehune346119 күн бұрын
I'm curious as to why is that you feel sorry for the song
@timshort322019 күн бұрын
@ the original was beautiful. She mangled it into an unrecognizable vocal exercise.
@Menehune346118 күн бұрын
@ I wouldn't blame her for that would be the direction that Jacob Collier wanted her to go since he's a producer of this song he orchestrated the riffs that she did and Nurse video of it hurt him, teaching her what he wanted. And even then, I would argued that these pieces of art when released into society, it would be very boring to have the same piece every time there's definitely integral space that should be held for the original orchestration.. but I think it's important that we let music evolve and create new life and breathe new life into these classic pieces. And this is coming from someone who doesn't care for excessive. Mellisimas as well. I definitely think there's a time and place for it. And like he said in the video, Tori has a very expressive tone that is very delightful truly. And when she performs this live, it's next level. And there's an artistry to be said with that not everyone can hit scales like that. I think it is settles down to personal preference at that point.
@kevonwill578318 күн бұрын
If you don’t like the arrangement that’s okay please don’t listen to
@timshort322017 күн бұрын
@@kevonwill5783 I didn’t.
@JenniHayward29 күн бұрын
Agreed, Tori's natural voice really is amazing. The clip at the beginning of the video sounds like an AI mimic of her true voice because of the pitch correction. So unfortunate that they are doing this.
@hollygreen598828 күн бұрын
you are amazing. I never knew any of this and the way you explain each note and show it on the graph is really cool to watch and understand. I love your videos.
@haleykay776Ай бұрын
A few years ago I got to hear Tori in a sound check and I was absolutely blown away.... what a talent
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
So how do you feel about what is being done to destroy her great natural voice?
@atomdecayАй бұрын
Must've been nice to hear a robot sing live lmao.
@ChrisM541Ай бұрын
I bet you're not blown away with the shocking level of auto tuning of her voice here.
@davidduff5123Ай бұрын
What happened?
@Proghead8829 күн бұрын
@@elizabethmiller7291you should watch Jacob's Logic session breakdown and his recording session video with her and actually learn how it was done and how naturally she actually sings like this without any autotune. There really isn't as much autotune as people think here. She's just that good, and on top of that, Jacob told her what to sing note for note, as he imagined it in a saxophone or guitar-like solo as part of a much longer piece where she only shows up at the end. The story of this recording is way more interesting than you see here.
@Tom_EmodyАй бұрын
Organic music fan here. Please be original everyone…please be yourself. Do the world a favor and let us hear your original voice. Thank you …Tom
@Spo-Dee-O-DeeАй бұрын
Most times the job of the musician is to set his personality aside and be the means through which the composer's intentions, manifested in squiggles on paper, are realized in sound.
@patriziamusicАй бұрын
the problem is that these runs are just over indulgence on her part just to show off as do other singers who use too many runs with no purpose.. the great maria callas once told a student in her masterclass who added a florid cadenza telling her to stop saying what is all this nonsense? just sing with conviction and dramatic truth... there is no reason to add runs for the purpose of showing off.. I suscribe to Maria Callas school of thought and always applied it in my career.
@douglascaskey730227 күн бұрын
Sometimes the best note is the one not heard. 🙄
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
@@douglascaskey7302 Like too much music in movies and TV shows, at an unbearable volume, so you can't hear dialogue.
@ChadDippyDora27 күн бұрын
I have heard that (hearing) perfect pitch is both a gift and a curse. You can hear all the mistakes and imperfections that others can’t. Also as you age your perfect pitch can go off pitch making everything sound off! I don’t have perfect pitch, but after watching so many of Fil’s videos (and subscribing Fil!) I can now hear pitch corrected singing and it’s both a gift and a curse! I guess I could always sense something was a bit false, fake or just wrong and I avoid consciously what I now know to be pitch corrected dirge. Thanks Fil, you are a star and I really appreciate everything you are doing. Please keep it up.
@CabinetPlasma-q8z25 күн бұрын
This was Jacob's arrangement. He was feeding the runs to Tori, she was only following what Jacob intended her to do. Tori is also a musician and her runs in her own songs are very tasteful and full of musicality. I didn't understand why I was never a fan of Jacob when he's clearly very talented, but I guess this is the reason.
@JSroidАй бұрын
Turning them all into production awards.
@mesamom62Ай бұрын
Just my opinion, but I believe a capella should be able to be sung live. It's what our choir worked so hard to do in high school. And when I go to hear an a capella group live it's because I want to hear their voices live, without the layering done in the studio. I want to see their personalities through their music. And if there is a mistake here or there, that's ok. In concert, it's the human element I think many of us want to experience.
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
Amen to that.
@Joshsclips24 күн бұрын
she performs this live all the time lol
@nakitahorton659812 күн бұрын
They have performed this live and it’s incredible
@adrian.joker133822 күн бұрын
The amount of judgy people in these comments is wild🤣 imagine if everyone just listened to what they liked and just didn't listen to what they didn't👀 "ThEY rUInED a cLAsSic" I dunno if you know the original is still there to listen to, just listen to that, Jacob Collier's style of production isn't my favourite thing ever, it's quite commercial, but he's experimenting with random stuff, and it's gotta be marketable to fund itself, just accept that people like different things - the video is a great analysis, quite unbiased and still appreciates the artists talent, really great, the comments though...a bunch of salty people🤣
@NotMarkKnopfler26 күн бұрын
It reminds me of Maria "why sing one note when 450 will do" Carey.
@alanbutterworth4219Ай бұрын
It removes everything that is human. That is the point.
@aquamarine99911Ай бұрын
Yup. It's a feature, not a bug.
@credenza1Ай бұрын
Modernism - all the results of Modernism are pastiche or parody. The spirit of inspiration has fled.
@christishusbandakastan7618Ай бұрын
That is easily the worst rendition of one of my favorite songs. Just horrible.
@matthewjamestaylorАй бұрын
Pitch correction is an esthetic choice and for many of us a poor one. And for me as well, this much ornamentation is jarring and another poor esthetic choice. They are part of the same decision process. Cheers.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
@@matthewjamestaylor That may be true for you and many others but, as far as calling it jarring, isn't that a subjective opinion and for everyone of us who doesn't like this style of singing there will be someone else who loves it. When we are discussing something as important as what the music industry as a whole has done and is doing to obliterate real music, don't you think that subjective comments that disparage an artist are quite out of place underneath an informative analysis video that faithfully provides us with the objective facts and the plain truth about the destruction and deception that passes for standard operating procedures throughout the music industry today?
@louisramosaАй бұрын
Yes, it would be awful with or without pitch correction
@silvercliveАй бұрын
Sounds like she is in pain.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
The one problem associated with Fil's instructive analysis videos here on KZbin where comments sections are not turned off is that there are always a bunch of commenters who can't seem to resist their misguided urges to disparage an artist. Music is such a subjective thing - what one person may love another will not want to listen to. You know, singers are sensitive souls who can be quite vulnerable to disparaging remarks just like the one I am now responding to. But, I see, you have lots of similarly disposed company. It's unfortunate. Worse than unfortunate is that such comments disparaging artists are the very kind of sentiments expressed by others who purport to be music lovers that may be at the root of why many artists feel the need for a safety net and resort to using tactics like pitch correction and lip-syncing performances. I hope you and others like you will one day understand the horrible impact that a plethora of those kinds of comments can have.
@Cashcrop54Ай бұрын
Even my unexperienced ears could hear the little "warps" in the voice when the process was in those rapid variations. Almost sounded like a small car horns honk. It's criminal. The fact that none of the offenders has contact you and give an explanation for this says volumes! Thanks Fil. Keep up the exposing what is happening.
@cheapskate8656Ай бұрын
I'm a pretty average singer, trying to get better. I dont have very good ears and I wouldn't even notice if a note was missed. Listening to both renditions the natural voice just sounded smoother. I was recording myself singing a song yesterday and I had to go from quiet husky to strong and higher pitch. I felt my voice cracking on the way up but got it back on track again. I thought OK, I'll have to rerecord that. However, on listening to it (it wasnt as bad as I imagined) I liked it, it was human. I think there is something in people that likes seeing a bit of a struggle before the victory.
@mathmusicstructure29 күн бұрын
Jacob wrote this and got her to sing it pretty much exactly as written. Not sure why she's catching so much heat.
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
Yet she went along with those choices. She's complicit in them. She could have said no. That's why she's catching so much heat.
@BrofUJu9 күн бұрын
@@roberthaynes8830 huh? Autotune is something decided on by the producer, probably Jacob
@benmacdhuiАй бұрын
How the music industry ruined music for all
@ralphditchburn1456Ай бұрын
The grammars too. Noooo
@benmacdhuiАй бұрын
@@ralphditchburn1456 Fixed. Feel better? Lol
@benmacdhuiАй бұрын
@@ralphditchburn1456 Fixed. Feel better now?
@BlueM-o2bАй бұрын
All people have to do is pretty much what they're doing, releasing and selling their own stuff. The next step is to stop feeding the machine. Not enough people are doing this. People are paying $14k to see Taylor Swift "perform," and even less popular or older groups for $400+. If record companies can make money for trash, why wouldn't they? They're businesses, not artists. I don't understand why anyone would arrange this song with such a treatment. The singer isn't even conveying the message or underlying melody of the music. If this is to honor the song, why is she just randomly vocalizing totally unrelated runs? You lose the song and the point of it. She's just doing vocal exercises.
@ralphditchburn1456Ай бұрын
@@BlueM-o2b well said
@hitryyАй бұрын
Would love to see you doing a Tiny Desk performance analysis! Always was wandering whether they use pitch correction since it sounds waaay too smooth
@akfluteАй бұрын
NMIXX Tiny Desk is one that I have really been wondering about
@Vita_TerraАй бұрын
He did one for a BTS Tiny Desk performance. It was pitch corrected.
@jsc9000Ай бұрын
@@Vita_Terrahe did Taylor swifts tiny desk and it was live it was compared against a live performance that had been auto tuned for the official video not the live performance
@atomdecayАй бұрын
They absolutely pitch correct. Honestly unless you're standing next to someone without any mics or equipment, they're 100% pitch correcting. Stop thinking anyone is "all natural". It ain't gonna happen. Anyone who trusts Jacob Collier to not pitch correct is a fool.
@jsc9000Ай бұрын
@ just watch the video fil did I’m just repeating what he said
@bjorneriksson6480Ай бұрын
who cares, that version was ridiculously over the top tormented whailing, like a parody from spinal tap
@rayl690129 күн бұрын
Except that Spinal Tap is good, whereas this is garbage
@Proghead8828 күн бұрын
I bet you didn't hear the actual song and just this shorter clip of it. You can't enjoy something fully without context, and without understanding the styles and instruments it was influenced by, especially when it comes to something as personal to people as the voice. Ever thought that you can have a bluesy voice AND a voice that sounds like a jazz saxophonist improvising on the same song, for example? There are many ways to perceive emotion from the voices and chords here. Interesting how so little people in this video's comments don't stop to notice how the harmony Jacob creates and the melodies he create for Tori on purpose, serve an emotional landscape that is uniquely rich and inspiring? Maybe they didn't take the time to truly listen before they were biased by their past or this video's opinion.
@roberthaynes883026 күн бұрын
@@Proghead88 And yet it sounds crap. Not for me, and many others on here it seems.
@mpol70123 күн бұрын
@@rayl6901sounded like she was singing at a funeral
@IAMTHEJUGGERNATEАй бұрын
That might be the most soulless "look what I can do" rendition of that song I've ever heard. It's like there was not even an intention of showcasing the song itself, it was just a medium to show off consecutive vocal runs. She could have not even been saying words and it would have had the same effect on me as a listener. It's like the entire point was to try to get people to say "wow she is a talented singer" instead of "wow, what a great song".
@HughConnor200126 күн бұрын
I think your comment, perhaps because it's in response to a video that focuses uniquely on the lead vocal, rather misses that the lead vocal is only part of a remarkably complex harmonic arrangement. While one can analyse the individual vocal and the production that did or did not go into it, it is that totality that is to be judged for its effect on the listener. For me, I love that totality, though I recognise that I have a strong bias from my long exposure to Jacob's work and my predisposition to see beauty in the expression of his remarkable musicality. Tori is a talented singer, for sure. But this was very much not a case of the singer wanting to steal the show - as I think this video mentioned, she was singing the part that Jacob had written for her to complement his harmonies.
@Elbownian26 күн бұрын
That overwrought style of singing is just gilding the lilly, and runs the enjoyment of simple beautiful melodies.
@HeightsomethinghumanАй бұрын
Fil, you stated exactly what pitch correction sounds like when a singer is doing runs and hitting every note dead on… makes me think they can’t sing! They sound like piano keys with a human like voice.’Talkbox’ !!!
@tonybarkham3679Ай бұрын
Wow, the real voices from 19:50 sounded so good, so natural, and so full of human emotion. You're absolutely right Fil, the pitch correction totally destroys these artist's ability. Sad, especially when people are simply not allowed to hear real emotions ... Artificial is simply not 'art' and not real, but this is what almost all industries are giving us to consume. Why? To maximize, profit, ROI, and to sell to as many people as possible through standardization practices.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
And, it will maximize profit, ROI and the rest so long as those of us who are real music lovers and who care about what may be the eventual demise of real music altogether sit back and do nothing about it. This may be a quixotic fight but surely it is a fight worth having in a serious effort to save real music from oblivion, right?
@jameshall9402Ай бұрын
You are a friend to the musical artist, not a foe.
@kevlarV2rocketRSVАй бұрын
Phil. "The power of Christ compels you!"🤣🤣🤣
@susanherbert3805Ай бұрын
There should be a law to save classic songs from this type of destruction .
@Jade-902Ай бұрын
Fil - I posted (in Facebook group) a young lady singing “The Prayer”. No pitch correction. No auto tune. It was beautiful to my ears. I’d rather support local musicals.
@CHUMPTYTRUMPTYАй бұрын
Paul Simon should sue her for elder abuse!
@suzzyrivercrossing5542Ай бұрын
For realz!
@planetmullinsАй бұрын
lol
@lovelylife3012Ай бұрын
Why does evryone in this comment section thinks it's Tori's fault ?
@gregmcdonald8962Ай бұрын
@@lovelylife3012 It's her fault for choosing to sing it the way she does, regardless of pitch correction, which is what most people are saying. It's a difference of day old garbage vs end of the week pickup.
@dogman5680Ай бұрын
@@gregmcdonald8962 she didn’t choose to sing it this way, Jacob chose her and told her exactly what to sing note for note. There is a video about it, which Fil refers to at the beginning of this one… Try and pay attention!
@johnlawler2455Ай бұрын
And the WINNER of this year's Grammys...ALL of them is......... AUTO TUNE!
@BH-h6lАй бұрын
😄
@HeightsomethinghumanАй бұрын
And the runner up….pitch correction!
@Fastvoice29 күн бұрын
No joke: Celemony - the company behind Melodyne pitch correction - won the technical Grammy 2012. And last year it was Antares (Auto-Tune) that won a Grammy. So everything is already settled.
@yvonnevanwaegeningh-tiggel457729 күн бұрын
Let's not forget the brand new miming category! 🤣 Plenty of possible nominees to choose from... 😑
@Heightsomethinghuman29 күн бұрын
@@Fastvoice Know nothing about technical devices here, so are you serious?
@reginavalerie129 күн бұрын
Wow Fil I know you are a talented musician but you are also a great teacher ❤❤❤🎁💝🎵🎶🎵🎶
@KellyK100028 күн бұрын
They do have a "live" version with John Legend - PLEASE look at that performance to see if it's actually "live"??
@danielpiatekАй бұрын
Sounds a little crazy, but ... we are being trained to hear "computer voice" as human. Trained to no longer hear any difference. This is not good.
@jesusislukeskywalker4294Ай бұрын
they want us interacting with robots.. we see it all over youtube with the Ai narrated videos 😳 listeners comments show that they don't even realise they are listening to a robot.
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
The process of UN-training needs to start NOW!
@ThatRipOffАй бұрын
The amount of people already unable to recognize AI generated voices or images is already terrifying as it is.
@windyleecarrАй бұрын
An agenda of dehumanising. We're the frog in a saucepan slowly being boiled/conditioned for when they finally replace real artists with AI. Is your favourite artist deceased?.. Worry not! With our new technology we came make them perform any old garbage they'd never realistically approve of, and we don't even have to pay them!!! Welcome to the new dark age. No independent thought or genuine emotion shall be permitted.
@MattsRangerАй бұрын
There is a pretty spooky idea from that. It will be more and more difficult to recognize legit figureheads in government.
@markkinnish1196Ай бұрын
Great update as always Fil
@cpmf2112Ай бұрын
A Crappella
@rb4peaceАй бұрын
So true 😂
@ytuser392Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@peterconnolly76Ай бұрын
I hate it when people do a cover and completely ruin the tune as if that doesn’t matter . The music is as important as the lyrics .
@mingisfixon645229 күн бұрын
What is the point of a cover if it's just the same as the original. Most just want the same piece in different voices/instruments, which is so lame. Imo, this Tori version is barely Bridge Over Troubled Water and kind've like an over-the-top reimagining. U can't look at this version as anything like the original cuz it rlly isn't. The point is spectacle (and to be virtuous), and I'm honestly glad it exists bcuz nowadays, proper vocalists that do interesting things with their voices aren't mainstream.
@Jason-Moon28 күн бұрын
16:30 my cats went completely psycho from this music. Absolutely terrified.
@hrizonsdebbieАй бұрын
How is there still not a shirt that says, "A440 standard pitch equal temperament"?
@pepsimaruАй бұрын
100% 😂
@elizabethmiller7291Ай бұрын
That shirt would be missing a few words: like, for instance, "Say NO to..." :)
@dladouceurАй бұрын
BECAUSE EQUAL TEMPERMENT IS OUT OF TUNE AND WAS A MISTAKE OF CONVIENENCE
@bak2backАй бұрын
Ken Tamplin vocal academy crossed with Jacob Collier and Tori Kelly "where the proof is in the pitch correction" 😂🤣
@pointermom7641Ай бұрын
This is the first time I ever heard this artist. I do not care for her voice. I do not like all those runs and she sounds very shrill to me. Just personal choice I guess. Maybe the perfection of the original song and the exquisite harmonies of Simon & Garfunkel are just too much for me to appreciate any other iterations.
@melaniepemberton2882Ай бұрын
I agree that the original is fantastic, but the group Blake did a fabulous cover (imho).
@l_ha3er1n_Ай бұрын
I don't think a lot of ppl in the comments cares about this artist since her audience is mostly late millenials, young adults, Gen Z and the next generations. Most people in this comment section are born in the 60-80s and obviously Tori Kelly's the opposite of what people like here
@lovelylife3012Ай бұрын
Tori Kelly is incredible live please give her a chance behind this one song.
@aryangill908Ай бұрын
Listen to some of her other songs, she has some great ones that aren't all runs
@AndrewKesler9 күн бұрын
It's not an award for a cappella performance, it's purely an award for the quality of the arrangement.
@rdsaplala22 күн бұрын
Just discovered this channel, thank you so much for sharing these things, they're very informative. It seems that pitch correction is now so commonly used to the point that it becomes almost a standard in the music industry. It's very helpful for people like me, who are off key almost 50% of the time LOL. But I hardly see its use for highly skilled vocalists.
@van_goghxАй бұрын
I would love to see a website with a database of music artists and specific albums and whether or not the vocals are pitch corrected or not. Then when purchasing music the consumer can check the website to see if they’re getting the real thing. 🎤
@Spo-Dee-O-DeeАй бұрын
Should it also disclose how many takes were needed to get an entire phrase full of acceptably pitched notes?
@windyleecarrАй бұрын
Probably easier to just presume 99% of major label music from the last decade or so is more than likely pitch corrected. The stuff that isn't is sadly an anomaly these days.
@Olkam-w5uАй бұрын
Consumers buy music not for the sake of music, but for the parasocial relationship with the star. Talk to fan clubs. "Or buy tracks on Spotify to listen to while running or driving. It doesn't really matter how it's made, the main thing is that it's lively and not complicated." - these are not my words, but those of a person from American music radio.
@Spo-Dee-O-DeeАй бұрын
@@Olkam-w5u The self-annointed "real music lovers" are a distinct minority in the overall market for music.