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!
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Tags: humour, mixing, professional-engineers
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BTW, speaking of “Roxanne”….
Is it me, or is the tape machine winding up to its proper speed (15 IPS?) at the beginning of the song?
Our errors and omissions are what makes us stand out as individuals. These exapmles where wonderful in the fact that we are not perfect. I am an amateur trying to just record the sound the way the musician wants it to be heard. Thank you for these bloopers and keep them coming because if treated as a learning tool (like I am sure you meant too) they teach that none of us our perfect. The best part of what we do is that if we do it right it should be like we were never there. I live for the day when I can record a song and capture the true feeling and intensity that makes all this time and effort worthwhile.
I love these tracks even more now…all of ’em.
yeah, i guess around the time radiohead were doing ‘the bends,’ john leckie showed thom yorke all the places various vocal edits were made on ‘plastic ono band,’ and i think specifically on “working class hero.” thom said it was majorly disillusioning.. yeah, that specific cut always stood out so much to me – it’s incredibly obvious.
Your iron lung is showing.
wooo…. I really like this guys blogh. oops sorry that h key on my keyboard is just to close to thr g key.
Great BLOG.
“even the pros aren’t perfect” … yeah, right…
Come on, Man… You forget that the engineer is subservient to the artist, music, producer etc, etc. Spend a little more time in the hot seat and you’ll see what I mean.
Somebody made a decision to move forward during the session… that’s all.
You have to pick your battles. The only place I would have put my foot down is on the Auto-Tune thing. You’re right about that. Most people don’t know how to use it.
peace
Radiohead are at it again on their latest realease, In Rainbows.
Reckoner, a song already awash with percussion, has a tambourine blooper. At 0:31 listen for the out of place and possibley dropped tambourine ala The Beatles!
Interesting stuff. The Clapton “powpower”- when making our band demo years ago, I remember hearing the same faint pre-echo preceding every song, it sounds like the same cause, just louder. Must be an reel-to-reel analog tape thing…
Green Day’s Long View has a mysterious shout in the middle of it after Billy Joe says ” …Call me what you will.” It’s real obvious. I’ve always wondered what the hell it was though.
My all-time pick for most noticeable, most distracting, and hardest to get anyone else to hear or identify occurs in the left channel of the Smashing Pumpkins song Hummer at about 5:57. It’s a tone of about a half second that’s completely out of place. Billy’s like Floyd. Not really the kind of guy to let something like that go, so I can’t really explain it.
Go here : http://www.eastern-crates.com/slide-hampton-vaclav-zahradnik-big-band-bs/ and listen to track B2
(or just use this link :
http://www.eastern-crates.com/files/vzbs/3.m3u )
and listen to that (great) track up until 7:36, there is a absolutely horrible tape-cut there.
Not quite as noticeable as the tambourine in the Beatles song, but on U2’s Achtung Baby, at the 3:10 mark of “Ultraviolet/Light My Way”, Larry drops a drumstick. There’s about 5 seconds there where it’s pretty noticeable that the drums aren’t what they should be… From what I’ve heard, Larry badly wanted to fix it, but the rest of the band liked the raw nature of it and insisted it be left in!
Check out the reverb on the vocal in On Call by Kings of Leon when Jared sings ‘..be there…’.
It cuts out really unnaturally and it just jumps out as being wrong.
This is inexcusable for a modern band on a big label, surely they have a producer good enough to sort that out?
This song was really big in the UK as well
Awesome blog, and very interesting finds, but I have to disagree you with on one of them. In the Incubus clip you posted, the change is not accidental. The singer sings it the same way live, and unless I’m mistaken I think the clip was all in one take.
You are all morons missin the point and hearing things that arent there. Please feel free to post your flawless recordings.
On one of Velvet Revolvers newer singles “The Last Fight†at about 3:07 Scott Weiland sniffles… must be dippin in on that rock star lifestyle again… REALLY easy to pick out.
Btw, the high note on Radiohead’s ‘you’ is actually a top b.
Hasn’t anyone noticed the mess-up in Simon and Garfunkel’s The Boxer, around just before 4.43?
another good one is on billy joel’s “downeastern alexa”…going from the chorus to the second verse, there is a cut in the vocal takes (when i was younger i always wondered how he did it with his voice….finally realized there are just 2 takes put together badly).
go listen to weezer’s pinkerton album for TONS of errors that were left of purposly to add to the raw nature of the album. for instance, at the beginning of across the sea…you can hear someone walking and shutting a door after the piano stops. also, the voice at the beginning of falling for you was from a radio transmition picked up through the amp. the band felt it worked because of the japanese theme to the album (even tho the voice is in korean!)
the point of these are just to have fun…..
Has anyone ever noticed when Paul McCartney comes in on Eleanor Rigby his vocals are both in the left and the right speakers ? than they abruptly cut him out of the left channel. It happens for a split second at around the 14 second mark. Clearly a mixing glitch but then again who cares ? :) Revolver has to be the best album ever made !!!!
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