Radio Edits

Listening to an abridged version of a song is worse than not listening to it at all.

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Radio Edits: Better not to hear the song at all? (If you disagree, please leave a comment)

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My thanks and apologies to Mario Ajero for mangling his podsafe version of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, Op. 27, No. 2, mvt. 1.

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7 Comments to “Radio Edits”

  1. Trevor SkyNo Gravatar says:

    I agree with your premise here, I really do. But after listening to your classical music example, I can’t help but conclude that the edit was *good*.

    Hear me out here…

    The original first movement is brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. And, depending on how fast you play it, it’s somewhere in the realm of 6 to 7 minutes long.

    But you can listen to a few minutes of it, and still appreciate its beauty. Now I admit that it’s not as good as hearing the entire thing. That doesn’t make it necessarily bad.

    However, this is because I’ve heard the whole thing. And I enjoy it. Maybe the problem is, if that’s the first time somebody was exposed to this music, they might not like it as much as they otherwise would. And so they’ll never bother to seek out the whole thing – or indeed realize that there is more to it that they have heard.

    So this is where I come back to completely agreeing with you. I’ll admit that I listen to commercial radio. Pop stations, even. And I’ve heard a lot of songs only in that format. I learned recently that one song that I quite enjoyed because of its energy and tempo was actually being played *sped up*. About 10bpm. When I heard the original, I didn’t like it as much.

    But that’s the point – my opinion wasn’t formed against the original work. I formed an opinion around a derivative work which was being passed off as the original.

    And that stinks.

  2. M-DNo Gravatar says:

    It’s like Billy Joel said… “It was a beautiful song but it ran too long / if you’re gonna have a hit, you gotta make it fit / so they cut it down to three-oh-five”.

    I think you may have overestimated the general public’s knowledge of Beethoven. Now, had it been a PDQ Bach piece… Also, as radio edits go, I don’t think the Beethoven was sped up enough, nor did it have an unnecessary drum machine running in the background.

  3. Jeff AdamsNo Gravatar says:

    I agree that radio edits are a disservice to the music but I’d still rather hear an edited version then no version at all.

    With that said, the Beethoven edit was quite well done. Not being the classical buff, I had to go back and listen to the original to remember what I was missing.

  4. BryanNo Gravatar says:

    And here I thought I chopped it all to heck. I wanted to use a modern pop/rock song, but that would’ve violated copyright law.

  5. PalmisanoNo Gravatar says:

    I totally agree Bryan. But…

    I bite of a sandwich is better than no sandwich at all.

  6. danielNo Gravatar says:

    i prefer short songs. i like it when bands write short songs to begin with, but i have no problem with someone making a song shorter if it maintains the integrity of the original.

  7. Dan DouglassNo Gravatar says:

    I think we all agree that music is an art form. Abridging art is disrespectful of the artist and similar to censorship. What would a painting be with a portion edited- such as a covering the breast on Botticelli’s Birth of Venus with a clam shell, or removing male genitals on an ancient Greek statue? Is it ok to censor words in a book or correct grammar in a Will James novel?

    I say leave it in tact.

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