Direct, open conversation with public figures - for everyone with a question to raise

Question Feedback

@ Paul Williams
Music Week News Editor

Will the art of studio recording suffer as artists are marginalized by the constraints of time and money? Lest we forget The Beatles and Brian Wilson created legendary recordings while completely omitting... Show more »Will the art of studio recording suffer as artists are marginalized by the constraints of time and money? Lest we forget The Beatles and Brian Wilson created legendary recordings while completely omitting the distractions pertained to live performance. Show less »

Submitted by: JohnDuffy | 29 votes for this..

0 comments | Topic: Arts and entertainment | Bookmark and Share

Answered by Paul Williams

Not necessarily. Certainly now most of an artist’s income comes from live revenues. The Beatles and The Beach Boys spent hours in the recording studio, but only in their later careers. Over the past thirty... Show more »Not necessarily. Certainly now most of an artist’s income comes from live revenues. The Beatles and The Beach Boys spent hours in the recording studio, but only in their later careers. Over the past thirty years or so the recording process has slowed down, partly because there’s much better equipment now so people can indulge themselves with technology. Also the issuing of albums has slowed down; the pattern now tends to be to release an album every three years. Show less »

0% of people thought this was a good answer (0 votes). Do you think this is a good answer? Yes No

Comments

There are no comments on this question. Add yours below.

Add Comment