AnnieDreams wrote:The main difference I was pointing out was that while recording live no one could say "shit, that was a rotten take. Hang on, we'll go over that again and get it on key."
Really, I'm just sick of people giving bands and artists flak for being "sell-outs" more "put-together" or "less real" than whoever's in their current playlist.
Musicians have different ways of doing things. The White Stripes and Nirvana might have good live albums/dvds that haven't been edited or tampered with at all. Our Lady Peace has one that has. Both methods have merit, and it doesn't make a band "less respectable" to do either.
Well, I am not really trying to compare OLP's live album to any other particular live album from a band that I think is cooler.
I just feel that a live album or DVD should be representative of what it is like to see that band live. Every overdub that is done in a studio takes away from the essence of what a live album or DVD even is.
When they later record and insert a drum fill that is used to mask the sound of an audience singing incorrect lyrics, that hides the fact that when you go to an OLP concert, the crowd WILL fuck up Is Anybody Home.
Especially notable is the entire of Whatever. What they are doing here is taking a live recording and trying to manipulate it to make it sound as much as possible like the studio recording. If you don't know what I'm talking about, Raine's voice has been filtered to mimic the studio version. At live concerts you would hear his unfiltered voice when they play Whatever. It is not representative of their live shows to do this, and yet this is how they label it.
Now, it is certainly possible to listen to/watch Live and enjoy it for what it is. But it is not an honest representation of their live shows.