gibsonguitar1988
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- Feb 9, 2008
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Old Joe there, was certainly able to use the most developed technological production tools of the time period for most of The Eagles material. If that band was new and recording today, they'd use what's available now.
I listen to that old Eagles stuff, and don't hear much in the way of "raw performances"... They sound really slick to me.
It isn't so much the whole analog vs digital for him as much as the lack of human performance in popular music. Most music these days is processed, autotuned, techno, programmed, etc. The Eagles didn't do or need that. They actually could play and sing. So what if their records were glossy - nothing wrong with that. What Joe is talking about is getting humans together and actually playing real instruments and not autotuning the crap out of everything. It's not so much Pro Tools vs tape. It's more about real talent vs no talent that is programmed to sound good.
I'll take "slick" Eagles ANY DAY over the new stuff in popular music these days... I said in my other post there are a lot of good bands still around but in popular music rock n' roll is gone. It's all sugary pop stuff. But hiding in the background, I agree, are some great rock n' roll bands (Buckcherry, Blackberry Smoke, etc). But they will never get the spotlight like rock n' roll did in the 70s. The autotuned pop is what is all so popular and it's very perfected and unhuman like. As glossy as the Eagles were, they weren't anti-human. It was real people singing and playing and people with mucho talent. If you were to hear some of these people now sing without their auto tune it would be awful. I remember when Taylor Swift tried to sing Rhiannon with Stevie Nicks without her autotune. It was awful....
I like both raw rock n' roll ala AC/DC and slick recorded bands like Eagles, etc. I love the Eagles for the fact they can sound like the records I've come to know, and I love more raw bands too. But as slick as the Eagles may be, at least they can play and sing, very very well. Their way of perfection was rehearsing until it sounded that way and with great talent. And it still had a live feel and a human aspect to it. Now you just hit a few buttons and it sounds in tune but very computerized.