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Needs reworking

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I am suggesting reworking our dubbing articles. Please see discussion at Talk:Dubbing. -- Infrogmation 18:02, 15 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Confusion: overdubbing vs mutiple tracking vs sweetening

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In the United States, the unions SAG and AFTRA seem to call overdubbing "multiple tracking" in their rules. http://www.sagaftra.org/node/1475. See also this pdf with definitions: AFTRA INFORMATION REGARDING "MULTIPLE TRACKING" VS. "SWEETENING"

5Q5's post continued: Wikipedia has the articles Multitrack recording and History of multitrack recording, the latter which states "Multi-track recording differs from overdubbing and sound on sound because it records separate signals to individual tracks. Sound on sound which Les Paul invented adds a new performance to an existing recording by placing a second playback head in front of the erase head to play back the existing track before erasing it and re-recording a new track."

This is too confusing to me, as it is possible we are dealing with obsolete terms. Music is not my beat. I still don't know what it's called when you hear a singer's voice on a song sung in perfect harmony with themselves, sometimes for just seconds as an added effect. Multitracking, overdubbing, sweetening? Sigh. 5Q5 (talk) 15:36, 21 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Reorganization by recording formats as a possible rewrite strategy

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This seems already a quite useful article, but the history of 'overdubs' (and I use the term broadly and inclusively, I admit) might be best considered in terms of each format of recording. For example: -Cylinder recordings were, at first, recorded to other cylinder machines to be re-recorded (dubbed?) before being sold to the general public. -Edison Diamond disc recordings that were first obtained acoustically (without electrical microphones) were later re-released with electrically recorded orchestra backing. This could be considered a dub. This is partly represented in the article at the time of this comment, but perhaps could be expanded on. -Fully electrically recordings on 78 rpm discs were generally one take, but exceptions are surely there before L.P's. Most frequently people mention Les Paul as recording to one 78 rpm record, then playing along with that recording to record another disc recording as the birth of multi-track or dub recording. This may or may not be the case, but Les Paul seems to have had quite an effect on how often this process is applied. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.114.180.198 (talk) 05:45, 1 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Patti Page - With My Eyes Wide Open I'm Dreaming

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The sentence about Patti Page quoted four times on her record as vocalist has a "citation needed" flag. But it took a very quick "Images" search to verify it (several photos are around of the original Mercury vinyl - and even the CD -, with the detail clear on the label). 213.254.2.58 (talk) 18:53, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

People need to know difference between double-track vs harmonisation

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Whoever wrote the following sentence don't know tf they're talking about (last sentence, first paragraph under Examples): "They would effectively harmonize with their own vocals, like a choir but with just one voice."

Double-tracking the lead vox isn't the same as overdubbing a harmonising layer. Double-tracking is typically roughly the same part (ie., same note and delivery/phrasing, although sometimes you can do a 'loose double-track' where the phrasing is varied slightly on the second layer). Harmonisation is a different note altogether.

Whoever wrote this - learn your shit and go back to school

outdated

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The paragraph that says overdubbing can "today" be done on a PC with an audio card needs an update since audio is done on a chip. Do audio chips come with software that allows overdubbing or do you have to buy separate software? 100.15.127.199 (talk) 14:15, 18 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Ew

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Hola Ahmed el dwiki (talk) 02:24, 20 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]