Inspired by “engineering screw-ups” on Gearslutz, here’s a list of recording and mixing bloopers that made it past the mixing room onto the final release.
These aren’t performance missteps, where the band missed a cue, or the singer came in too soon. There are certainly countless examples of those but most were included intentionally, to add character or realism. Rather, the flubs below highlight mistakes in recording or mixing that could have been corrected before the track was released.
Some of the mistakes probably went unnoticed. Some, I’m sure, were noticed and begrudgingly accepted because of a deadline. But reassuringly for us amateurs, they all prove that even the pros aren’t perfect.
Botched Edits
The edit in question happens at 0:09 in the clip below. I scratch my head every time I hear it. So many questions: What went through the mixing engineer’s head? Why didn’t Clapton object? What’s powpower?
Recording and mixing engineers traditionally build a vocal track by “punching in” (re-recording a rough spot) and “comping” (building a single vocal track from the best parts of multiple takes.) Before digital editing, this was a manual procedure prone to timing errors. So the example above, recorded in 1970, is forgivable (although puzzling, because it’s so obvious.) Today, however, it’s common practice to digitally automate the punches and comps, which means the next two examples really shouldn’t have happened:
You was the first track on their first album, so the band surely aimed to make an impact. And without question, Thom Yorke bellowing high A for 8 seconds is a great hook, perhaps even the song’s defining moment… until you realize that his wail is comped from shorter sections. Listen for the cut at 0:05:
Notice how the vocal timbre changes in the middle of the word “yeah”, after “eyes deceive me.” I can’t fathom how this edit made it to mastering. Unlike the Radiohead example, which is only obvious on close listen, this cut simply sounds distracting!
Here, the tonality changes completely at 0:10, and again at 0:30. Lennon supposedly recorded a demo on his home tape recorder, and at mix time, he and Phil Spector (who produced the track) preferred the emotion in the home recording for one verse only.
This is a cop-out. There are “perfect takes,” for sure, but for a professional (or a self-described genius like John Lennon) there’s no such thing as a take so perfect it can’t be recreated.
Strange noises
This is the best example of John Bonham’s notoriously squeaky bass drum pedal. Jimmy Page discussed the squeak in a 1993 Guitar World interview:
The only real problem I can remember encountering was when we were putting the first boxed set together. There was an awfully squeaky bass drum pedal on “Since I’ve Been Loving You”. It sounds louder and louder every time I hear it! [laughs]. That was something that was obviously sadly overlooked at the time.
(Note: I boosted the high frequencies in this clip to highlight the pedal sound.)
Some lessons I’ve learned from The Beatles:
- All you need is love.
- The walrus was Paul.
- If you drop a tambourine while recording, stop the tape and re-record.
I can see this slipping by unnoticed because it almost sounds musical. Almost. But listen to the clip a few times, and it becomes obvious just how out of place that tambourine is. (For more details, check out What Goes On, a fantastic reference for the little nuances like these in Beatles recordings.)
As Aguilera sings, you’ll hear a faint rhythm track in the background. This is headphone bleed – sound leaking from her headphone monitor into the microphone. (Note: I boosted the high frequencies on this track to make the bleed more obvious.)
Dave Pensado, who mixed Beautiful, discusses the noise here:
The song was about being beautiful and honest in EVERY way. That bleed is honest. It was one of the most honest vocal performances I had EVER heard. It was actually the scratch vocal.
This is another cop-out. Mixing engineers have their own version of the fourth wall, and Pensado broke it with this mix. Honest or not, the bleed reminds listeners of the technology used to record, and that distracts us from Aguilera’s performance.
Technical screw-ups
As Rick Wright holds the last piano chord, the tape speed wobbles for a second:
This was not done on purpose, as some claim, to fit the song on side A of the vinyl album. (LPs ran up to 30 minutes per side, and Dark Side Of The Moon‘s A-side was less than 19 minutes.) Rather, this is a simple tape speed glitch.
This clip plays two phrases from the 2nd verse of Roxanne. Compare the reverb tail at the end of “night” and “right.” The first decays naturally and cleanly, the second ends abruptly.
Most likely, this is the result of a vocal punch-in or comp, where the reverb was recorded directly to the track, rather than added during mix-down. (The moral: Don’t print your effects to tape too early!!)
Does Natalie’s voice sound odd to you on the word “parents?”
Autotune is a powerful tool, to be sure, and used on the right material, it can enhance a recording. But here, it’s noticeable and distasteful: Natalie has a great voice, and the engineers did her a disservice by not re-recording the note. I like to think there’s a special seat in hell reserved for those who abuse Autotune this way.
Lessons
These clips hold a couple of lessons for amateur producers and home recordists:
1) You don’t need to be perfect. The pros know this. Most mistakes will simply go unnoticed, some mistakes add character, and sometimes a looming deadline trumps all.
2) That said, there’s no excuse for releasing sub-par material when you have the time and the skills to improve it. The Incubus, Dixie Chicks, and John Lennon examples especially are obvious to the point of annoyance, and mostly just make the mixing engineer seem lazy!
For more recording and music industry articles,
Subscribe to the Hometracked feed, or receive email updates.
Tags: humour, mixing, professional-engineers
126 comments
Trackback URI Comments feed for this article
And from another user on the same board:
Just weighing in on your Pensado/Aguilera comment…. completely disagree. There’s a time and a place for everything in music, and the parts of her heart and soul present on that vocal track outweigh anything that could have been done technologically to ‘fix’ it.
@ jjtcorsair (“perfection is boring”)… right on.
Great post overall… thanks for the fun soundbites!
I’ve got a great one that always makes people chuckle when I point it out to them.
In the first verse of High Plains Drifter by the BBoys on Paul’s Boutique – I believe it’s MCA that commits a nice little vocal, tounge twister gaffe.
The lyric is:
Pulled over to the river to take a rest
Pulled out a pair of pliers and pulled the bullet out of my chest
Only listen to how he says it on the song…. he clearly says PLAIR of pliers rather than pair of pliers.
Pretty funny.
I think most of these clips were indeed mistakes, but it was either “Oups! Doesn’t matter” or “Oups! Hey, that sounds pretty cool!”
Modern music technology makes perfection possible. That doesn’t necessarily mean that perfection is desirable.
Take Ozzy Osbourne as an example. Compare “Blizzard of Ozz” from 1980 (approx) to the latest “Black Rain” album.
On Black Rain, everything is perfect. The guitar sound is thick and heavy, and the songs are full of perfectly timed special effects. The result is anonymous and lifeless (except that Ozzy’s singing can still lift anything to near greatness…)
On ‘Blizzard, a young Randy Rhoads plays far from perfect. He really struggles with the timing on the fast solo parts and the guitar tone is rather thin and buzzy. There are a few overdubs and the odd rather amateurish special effects. The result is (IMHO) the greatest rock’n roll album of all time…
The one I never hear mentioned is Fleetwood Mac’s song “World Turning”. Halfway through the song there’s a pause as all instruments go silent for a beat before resuming- and in that instant, someone belched.
I haven’t seen anyone mention Kind of Blue, by Miles Davis. It’s the bestselling jazz record ever, but the first side of the recording plays back nearly a quarter-tone off-pitch.
Here’s a good one for ya!
Pink Floyd was amazing from the David Gilmour days on… Before that, they were spacy and without a defined direction.
I consider their work to be very well produced, etc.
However, I discovered a bloop on Momentary Lapse of Reason:
New Machine – second verse should be…
Sometimes I get tired of the waiting
Sometimes I get tired of being in here
Is this the way it has always been?
Could it ever have been different?
David sings the last line of the verse like this:
Could it HAVE ever have been different?
The vocal flow sounds like “could it’ve ever’ve been…”
I had to re-listen to it a lot to understand the anomaly.
Rock on David!
Sorry mate,
At least your Incubus example seems way off. Where you are hearing a cut, I am hearing a sound coming from the singing, from his mouth. I am pretty sure the “cut” you hear is the sound of the tongue touching the top of the mouth. How do I know? Because I have heard that same sound nearly every day of my engineering career. You are hearing something distracting where there has not been any vocal editing, but actually there should have been to prevent the distraction. Which kind of proves the opposite from what you are trying to say…
Things are often not what they seem…
Great post… I didn’t think anyone else paid attention to this kind of stuff. It’s both comforting and disturbing to know you crazies are out there.
Here’s a more recent example of audible edits in modern recording: On Wilco’s “Sky Blue Sky” album, track #7, “Please Be Patient With Me”. You can hear a breath edit right after the third verse, after the line, “It doesn’t mean that I don’t care…” Clear evidence of vocal compositing (though I still love the record).
Keep listening!
Nice collection of blopers. Part of the stuff is very hard to hear. I guess that my ear isn’t professional …
Fun blog, I have to say, listening to music, things like this hardly bothers me but it’s fun when someone figures these things out.
btw, in your list I miss ‘life on mars’ by bowie, when it fades out in the end you can hear the studio phone ringing. In a documentary about the song however they explained that the take was so near perfection that they let that one slide :D
My only contribution to this very cool list is the song “Missing You” by John Waite (a song I loathe, by the way).
You can tell that the song, at least the longer, ‘LP” version – is mixed at slightly various speeds….and the segues were so clunky and obvious.
Great post! I really like your blog!!!
Take Five by Brubeck has a really obvious edit between the end of the sax melody and the beginning of the drum solo….
Another one for you. At 2:44 in Pearl Jam’s “Given to fly”, there’s a loud, sharp sound overload, almost like a whistle. I’m guessing it’s acoustic feedback but can’t really be sure. It bugs the hell out of me every time I listen to the song. Whenever I point this out to someone, they can’t hear it…
“I feel like I’m eating crazy pills!” :)
Further clarification, it’s in the middle of the word “sometimes” in “and sometimes is seen a strange spot in the sky…”
yr probably the type of guy that worries about continuity in films too…
More Comments: ‹ Previous · 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · Next ›