The recording studio is a performance setting in which popular music performers often produce multiple takes, using particular strategies to vary outcomes in search of the 'perfect take'. However, repetition offers the opportunity to discover the unexplored liminality between what we expect to hear and what is performed. Observing multiple takes of one's own recorded performance within the temporal limits of a vocal recording session yields qualitative data to create an ethnography of both the process and the Work itself. Presenting artefacts from a recording session in conjunction with an autoethnographic text provides a demonstration of how evolving external cues, and internal cognitive scripts interact with technology and social conventions in the recording studio to impact a popular music musician's performance and, in effect, the creation of a new Work.
By:
Rod Davies (Monash University Victoria) Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom Dimensions:
Height: 230mm,
Width: 150mm,
Spine: 5mm
Weight: 140g ISBN:9781009253796 ISBN 10: 1009253794 Series:Elements in Twenty-First Century Music Practice Pages: 66 Publication Date:14 March 2024 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Repetition in performance; 2. The recording studio as a construction site; 3. The performer as a reflective practitioner; 4. That's perfect! Let's do it again; 5. Organisation can make it worth the risk; 6. Seeking out the slippery hills.