Brian Running <
runnin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Unfair, Brian! Derek is not agreeing with Tom Dowd because
> > of all those unrelated things. He is merely citing those unrelated
> > things as examples proving Dowd's genius. He is establishing
> > Dowd's cred as a guy who usually knows what he is talking about.
>
> Not unfair! He's choosing sides between the composers of the song
> - repeat, the composers, themselves - and the producer, and the
> reason for preferring the producer over the guys that wrote the song
> - repeat, the very guys that wrote the song - is because the producer
> has credentials in areas that have nothing to do with music.
Waves!
Hi, I'm here.
Let me make this clear. My basis for siding with Tom Dowd is due to a
rather excellent documentary called Tom Dowd & the Language of Music.
It covers the usual credentials that one wouldn't be surprised that a
music producer had (although many do not). Such as a formal musical
education and ability to play multiple instruments. He came from a
musical family (his mother was and opera singer and father a
concertmaster). He grew up around music and formally trained musicians.
He studied music at the City College of New York. He was even at some
point a conductor of a classical orchestra.
The jaw dropping reveal in the documentary was that he worked on the
Manhattan Project as an undergraduate - and that if he hadn't done so
much top secret stuff that he could not reasonably graduate from
university on the grounds that his tutors would not have high enough
security clearance to grade his work, and he was additionally unable to
publish any of the work he would be likely to do in the same area on the
grounds of national security, he would not have turned to music at all.
And if that hadn't happened we'd be far the poorer - and if he'd
continued in nuclear research he may have come up with some even more
terrible weapons than the atomic bomb. So we would have been doubly
worse off.
By the end of the documentary it becomes pretty clear that Tom Dowd was
a truly remarkable man with many talents, music being just one of them.
Now, if you just hear the statement that Lynyrd Skynyrd disagreed with
their producer over the key signature, you might assume, incorrectly,
that the producer was someone like Phil Spector or Malcolm McLaren, who
really didn't have much of a musical education. In which case on
balance one would expect the composers to have a better idea than the
producer about the key of a song.
However, this was a disagreement between self taught musicians and an
absolutely incredible amazing genius, one of the most important and
innovative people involved in popular music recording, who has a formal
musical education, a mind for sums (which is what a lot of music theory
boils down to), and who knows how to make atomic bombs.
Absolutely, I'd side with that guy in a discussion like this. Even if
the composition in question was my own.