Thursday, June 02, 2005

The Record Effect

Alex Ross in the New Yorker reflects on how the act of recording affects music, the musician and the listener:

"A few months after Gould published his essay (where he gloried in the extraordinary interpretive control that studio conditions allowed him), the Beatles, in a presumably unrelated development, played their last live show, in San Francisco. They spent the rest of their short career working in the recording studio. They proved, as did Gould, that the studio breeds startlingly original ideas; they also proved, as did Gould, that it breeds a certain kind of madness. I’ll take “Rubber Soul” over “Sgt. Pepper’s,” and Gould’s 1955 Goldbergs over his 1981 version, because the first recording in each pair is the more robust, the more generous, the more casually sublime. The fact that the Beatles broke up three years after they disappeared into the studio, and the fact that Gould died in strange psychic shape at the age of fifty, may tell us all we need to know about the seductions and sorrows of the art of recording."

[Link via Plastic Bag]

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