By Tina Weymouth (originally posted on the tomtomclub.com bulletin
board)
Tom Tom Club's taping/photography policy
We have a different experience (and still work
with and are advised by the same manager for 25 years) which is
to regard fans as being as important as the artists they support.
We feel any fan who's bought and cherished something of our work
deserves a mutual exchange to keep the cycle of relations active.
As we have no corporate sponsors to promote us---nor to tell us
how we may present our art
or ourselves, a good reason to stay clear most often---fans who
actively trade and exchange information and souvenirs are our best,
most natural support system.
However, we draw the line, even prosecuting those
who would exploit us for profit, especially when it involves inferior
quality bootleg merchandise and recordings.
Photos and Taping: We've posted here before that
we are only bound by club
policies or those of promoters with whom we've contracted. If it's
OK with them, it's OK with us. Rules are generally posted at the
club door. When in doubt, check via phone.
Camera flash doesn't bother any artist who is already
standing in the glare of harsh
lights and spotlights. For the sake of good photos we try to convince
in-house lighting techs to leave the lights bright, white and constant,
so fast film with no flash should work, too. We want people to be
able to see everyone on stage at all times, so to please be considerate
is what we ask.
As for taping, the best recordings are going to
be made on a simple cassette or DAT recorder using a stereo condenser
mic. This is how we do it for ourselves. No sound board recordings
are permitted. That's because they SUCK. Soundboard recordings give
the listener no idea of how the music is intended to sound. They
are only of use as a learning tool to the musicians and the soundman.
(Why are soundboard tapes so bad? Because the soundman
is ALWAYS attempting to compensate for what ISN'T amply amplified,
as well as various anomalies of the room, such as backwall slap,
and so on; and because soundboard recordings are also dry, i.e.
no reverberation, and frequently compressed to the flatness of Kansas,
they lack dynamic as well as resonance. They are missing crucial
elements that are, in fact, part of the music. It continues to amaze
us that these wretchedly inferior recordings are still touted and
traded. To us it's a little like those 16th-century surgeons who
would "bleed" their patients in the notion that they were
doing them some good.)
- Tina
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