Disclaimer: I don't begrudge anything TS has accomplished and I think she genuinely treats her fans very respectfully and appreciates them. I acknowledge that, originally, she did write much/all of her music and was successful doing so, well before she became an international phenomenon and a billionaire. She is talented without a doubt. I, personally, do not enjoy her music but I don't ever say it's 'bad' or 'trash' or worse. It's not my cup of tea but many, many people across the globe LOVE her music and her. So, more power to her.
However, just recently I've viewed a couple of videos that dispel some of the 'common knowledge' about her. First, Rick Beato made a video about why so much of current pop music sounds alike. His answer was that it's due to the fact that most of the music is created by the same 10-12 songwriters. He even said that, even though EVERYONE knows TS writes all of her own music, it's just not true. He singled out one of the several songwriters, Jack Antonoff, who have penned multiple songs for TS (and others on the pop charts). He mentioned a couple of other very prominent songwriters who've written songs for her and I looked them up and, sure enough, they're credited as the songwriter for several of her most popular (by streaming counts) songs. Digging into a few of these writers and I found they have written songs for pop queens, Ed Sheeran, hip-hop and rap artists, etc. It makes sense that the bulk of music being written by a few individuals would tend to sound the same. He did say that one big exception is Billie Eilish (sp?) who writes all of her stuff with her brother, who also plays a lot of the instruments on her songs. Beato pointed out that, many times, a performer (he used Sabrina Carpenter but said it's been this way forever) will require being credited with co-writing a song to share in the revenue. He pointed out that Carpenter does not play any instrument credited on her CDs nor is she credited with producing/arranging. So, he asked, how much did she ACTUALLY co-write? Probably very little, in his opinion.
A second video I viewed, the presenter had audio tapes of a few (3 or 4, IIRC) of TS's live show during the recent Eras tour from different venues. He put them through ProTools and the vocal of all 4 shows matched EXACTLY - same cadence, the exact same pitch, the same pause, the same ending on every phrase, etc. Which means that her vocals were backing tracks and she lip synced as there is no possible way a live performance from 4 different shows would be identical. Statistically impossible. Now, her shows lasted 3 hours many times and her fans don't care one way or the other. But, shouldn't she disclose to those fans, some of whom paid thousands of dollars for tickets, that her vocals are NOT live but are prerecorded? I don't go to live concerts to hear a perfect rendition of a song, note for note, perfectly in time/pitch, etc. night after night after night. If I wanted to listen to the recorded version, I would do so. At the very least, I would appreciate being told before I shell out however many dollars that the show I'm considering attending will include prerecorded tracks/vocals so I can make an informed decision.
Unfortunately, it seems that more and more 'live' concerts are, in fact, filled with prerecorded tracks while the performers dance, mug, lip sync, etc. Milli Vanilli and Ashley Simpson basically got run out of the music business for lip syncing - why is it OK now?
However, just recently I've viewed a couple of videos that dispel some of the 'common knowledge' about her. First, Rick Beato made a video about why so much of current pop music sounds alike. His answer was that it's due to the fact that most of the music is created by the same 10-12 songwriters. He even said that, even though EVERYONE knows TS writes all of her own music, it's just not true. He singled out one of the several songwriters, Jack Antonoff, who have penned multiple songs for TS (and others on the pop charts). He mentioned a couple of other very prominent songwriters who've written songs for her and I looked them up and, sure enough, they're credited as the songwriter for several of her most popular (by streaming counts) songs. Digging into a few of these writers and I found they have written songs for pop queens, Ed Sheeran, hip-hop and rap artists, etc. It makes sense that the bulk of music being written by a few individuals would tend to sound the same. He did say that one big exception is Billie Eilish (sp?) who writes all of her stuff with her brother, who also plays a lot of the instruments on her songs. Beato pointed out that, many times, a performer (he used Sabrina Carpenter but said it's been this way forever) will require being credited with co-writing a song to share in the revenue. He pointed out that Carpenter does not play any instrument credited on her CDs nor is she credited with producing/arranging. So, he asked, how much did she ACTUALLY co-write? Probably very little, in his opinion.
A second video I viewed, the presenter had audio tapes of a few (3 or 4, IIRC) of TS's live show during the recent Eras tour from different venues. He put them through ProTools and the vocal of all 4 shows matched EXACTLY - same cadence, the exact same pitch, the same pause, the same ending on every phrase, etc. Which means that her vocals were backing tracks and she lip synced as there is no possible way a live performance from 4 different shows would be identical. Statistically impossible. Now, her shows lasted 3 hours many times and her fans don't care one way or the other. But, shouldn't she disclose to those fans, some of whom paid thousands of dollars for tickets, that her vocals are NOT live but are prerecorded? I don't go to live concerts to hear a perfect rendition of a song, note for note, perfectly in time/pitch, etc. night after night after night. If I wanted to listen to the recorded version, I would do so. At the very least, I would appreciate being told before I shell out however many dollars that the show I'm considering attending will include prerecorded tracks/vocals so I can make an informed decision.
Unfortunately, it seems that more and more 'live' concerts are, in fact, filled with prerecorded tracks while the performers dance, mug, lip sync, etc. Milli Vanilli and Ashley Simpson basically got run out of the music business for lip syncing - why is it OK now?
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