Post
by marco17 » Wed Dec 08, 2010 2:30 pm
Hi all, my first post here, but a big fan, and just adding my 2 cents. I'd say 85% of musical acts are piping in something through a hard drive live. Whether it is extra guitars, keyboard sounds, or vocals/backing vocals. The problem is that everyone goes to the show and wants to hear it just like the album, and that's about the only way to do it.
I hate bringing this up because I liked the lineup, but Journey was the posterchild for this from about 2003-2005. They were touring to death and toured through Steve Augeri being extremely sick, which left his vocal chords in shambles. Once that happened, he needed rest, but they didn't stop touring. To get around it, they started piping in other live versions of him singing. Depending on how he was doing that night determined how much of the show was lipsync'd. Ultimately, it was discovered, though it did not get much attention, and Steve Augeri left mid-tour to try and recover, but was ultimately let go and replaced by Jeff Scott Soto, and now Arnel Pineda. Steve would sing live, but with his mic was turned off, in the even that something happened, a switch could be flicked and he'd be live. But, there would obviously be definite difference in his vocals. Luckily, while not as strong as he used to be, Augeri has recovered to a point he can sing live again, but overall it was a pretty indepth, ellaborate cover-up until they got caught.
Bottom line is that there are probably a lot of people who want to see Greg hit those notes, but he likely can't anymore due to age on wear and tear on his vocal chords over the years, so they pipe in some vocals to cover that. It's easier to pipe in prerecorded vocals then have the band tune everything down.
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