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To reinforce what I said nearly a year ago, in light of other comments: Larry Hooper's "I know some place you haven't been" at the end was clearly done in a sound studio; no doubt this is a recording. The recording itself is a very remarkable performance. It's of a very high quality. This is a tricky song, try it yourself, as some posters have! Then add the fact that this TV performance involves lip synching, which is flawlessly executed, and you have a spectacular job done by Lynn Anderson.
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@mthivier Where's the microphone, then?
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GOOD WORK
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the one dislike believes you should stay home
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this song is a toung twister i tried singing and it was horrable
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the instrument heard on the solo is a harmonica; but, the instrument he's holding is a melodica.
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the instrument heard on the solo is a harmonica; but, the instrument he's holding is a melodica.
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@callmeamanda76 This is definately a recording....You can tell because it sounds EXACTLY like the record. It is very hard to get the exact sound when you play it live, as it is on the record. Plus, as the previous post pointed out, at 0.58...the guy stands up to play the harmonica..and it starts playing before it gets to his mouth. Now that's REALLY hard to pull that off live.
@romeman01 with a complicated song like this, I'd think it would almost be MORE difficult to lipsynch, since one slip and it would be pretty obvious. Live or not, she does a pretty damned impressive job!
mthivier 10 months ago 4
The music is a playback. A common practice then, as now. The talent recorded the song, so, naturally, she would know how to perform it.
@callmeamanda76 I did live in those days & I work in the entertainment industry. LIVE also meant the performer needed a microphone, which is glaringly absent in the clip. In the long shots, there's no boom mic close enough to provide that kind of presence. Neither is there a mic cord anywhere on the stage floor. And these were the days before wireless mics.
pegbars 8 months ago 2