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Overproduction (music)

Excessive use of audio effects


Summary

Excessive use of audio effects

In music production, overproduction refers to the use of audio effects, layering, or digital manipulation in music production to an extent that subjectively decreases audio fidelity and listening enjoyment.

Usages

It is not always clear what critics mean by overproduction, but there is a minimum of a few common uses of the term:

  • Heavy use of audio processing effects such as reverb, delay, or dynamic range compression.
  • Heavy layering or multitracking; in the context of pop and rock music, this may refer to the addition of elements such as chorused vocals or backing strings.
  • Radio versions of songs pushed to be more pop through the use of loud drum beats or other instrumentation changes.
  • Heavy use of pitch correction, time correction, or quantization.
  • A recording overseen by a producer who imposes their own distinctive sound or techniques on a band or artist; Producers frequently accused of this kind of overproduction include Phil Spector and Mutt Lange.
  • Participating in the loudness war (or loudness race), which is a trend of increasing audio levels in recorded music over time, which reduces audio fidelity and creates distortion.

All of these meanings share the idea that a record producer or mastering engineer has made unnecessary additions or changes to a record in the production process and, in doing so, has decreased the quality or enjoyability of the music. There is little consensus among music critics or producers about when the use of an effect or production technique becomes excessive. For this reason, some producers consider the term unhelpful, confusing, and subjective.

Notes

References

  1. "The Beatles Let It Be...Naked".
  2. "Let It Be - Beatles (The) - Review - Goodbye, George Martin--Hello, Phil Spector".
  3. "Mutt Lange".
  4. "The Loudness Wars: Why Music Sounds Worse". NPR.
  5. "Record Production and the "Over Production" Myth".
  6. (23 August 2006). "Dylan rubbishes modern recordings". BBC News.
  7. "The Death of High Fidelity".
  8. "Music + digital + compression = atrocious sound?".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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