Gazza wrote on Feb 5
th, 2014 at 4:34pm:
Just heard it for the first time.
Not Jagger. Bloody good imitation, though and obviously recorded to make the listener feel like it COULD be him.
1) NOBODY could imitate Jagger that well. If its an
imitator, their vocal has been processed with a
Jagger-derived algorithm.
2) These algorithms, which break down an artist's
voice into every single tone, overtone, harmonic, etc,
are the brave new world we're entering right now.
It will soon be possible, if its not already, that you will
be able to take even a poor imitiation of Jagger, and
process it to virtual perfection. Including live, as it
happens.
3) But for sure at this point, corrective auto-tuning,
which is somewhat less sophisticated, is now
everywhere, on virtually every recording and live
performance. On the U2 forum, I've been kinda
impressed that the hardcore there seems quite
accepting of the idea that Bono could only sound
as good as he does on their new song with tuning/
processing. For me, it was listening to the dance
version of Doom And Gloom, where Jagger's voice is
isolated, virtually acapella, that convinced me that
he's using it too, including for his live vocals. And Keith
even to a greater extent.
You don't think so? Here's what you should read:
http://www.theverge.com/2013/2/27/3964406/seduced-by-perfect-pitch-how-auto-tune...Excerpt:
"Then Mike Auto-Tuned two versions of our song:
one with Cher / T-Pain style glitchy Auto-Tune,
the other with “natural” sounding Auto-Tune.
The exaggerated one was hilariously awesome –
it sounded just like a generic R&B song. But the second
one shocked me. It sounded like us, for sure. But an
idealized version of us. My husband’s gritty vocal
attack was still there, but he was singing on key. And
something about fine-tuning my vocals had made them
sound more confident, like smoothing out a tremble in
one’s speech."
Soon, up-and-coming singers, as a part of their
art, are going to design (and copyright) a completely
natural-sounding algorithm for themself that is at the
same time as distinctive and recognizable as Howling
Wolf or Ronnie Spector. And you'll never know the
difference. Because that algorithm will be built right
into every microphone they use.