I think unfortunately, I am now totally house trained. Last evening, I went to the open air concert at gateway of India, featuring Vikku Vinayak Ram, Shiv Mani, Selva Ganesh, Mandolin Srinivas and Shankar Mahadevan.
The sound was somewhere between unbearable and execrable. I can't believe anyone would stay on as a musician after listening to this sound.
Firstly, there is incredible bass. It is massive and dominates everything else. The rest of the sound is quite harsh. When Shiv Mani plays drums, even teh mildest tap produces a cannon like sound. If that is what people enjoy, then no wonder they turbo charge the bass. Such a concert has to be open air as the auditorium will break up if held indoors.
I also wondered where Shiv Mani has his mikes. Whatever he taps, be it a 20litre Bisleri bottle, or a suitcase, or an empty vessel, the sound is picked up cleanly, but when he taps his two sticks against each other, there is no sound.
Selva Ganesh plays Kanjira, but that too produced cannon like sound with the merest of taps. Only Mandolin Srinivas played with some style, and of course, there was No excess of bass there...
No way I can have sound like this at my home. Better be an audiophile.
Yes, it is a pity. However, there is some over-generalization in this thread too.
While many musicians are not concerned by the sound, many musicians are quite particular about it too. It all depends on the musician's perspective on their art. Someone posted about some rock bands earlier that are quite particular about the sound. It is entirely true. There are many musicians who obsess on the sound to the extent that they will spend hours and hours to prep, sound check, double check etc. before a concert. I remember for example a bunch of my local musician friends in India who were taken aback at the level of preparation and time that Opeth spent when they performed even in a very humble venue.
This level of preparation and obsession on detail makes all the difference between great live acts and average ones. And when I say bands, I include the entire crew as well. Plus, many of the live acts are not even just about music or sound. It is often about the entire experience. And so, many of the bands that are truly creative will even obsess about things like lighting, effects, artwork on CD covers, etc. But again, this is highly subjective - every musician and band has its own ethos.
Of course, there is the topic of talent and improvisation and *what* someone is really playing. Most classical musicians only seem to focus on that aspect. Probably because they have very little control of the sound themselves. Or they lack knowledge or don't care too much about it. I'm actually not sure.
It is also not just musicians who listen analytically and critically at the music (instead of the sound). Most people with sufficient knowledge of music (technical details) also typically tend to listen to music this way. Hence, the recording or the sound becomes irrelevant (relatively speaking). I guess another analogy would be that if a knowledgeable person would listen to the same song 50 times, they would prefer to listen to 50 different performances. However, an audiophile would prefer to listen to the same master tape in 50 different systems.
To put it another way, musicians and music lovers (more often) don't listen to the sound or even the music. They listen to the performance.
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