Sounds better when the West Angeles Choir sings it like that... Take a listen ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-4CeEL6MYtmo.htmlsi=t3cM3vlssPD516qm
Beautiful. But I wonder if the overall message of Praise to God would have been increased with the focus being mostly on the voice instead of such loud instrumentals?
I'm thinking it's the sound team that needs to adjust the volumes to ensure the instrumentals and vocals are balanced. A lot goes into making things sound glorious. That's why it's so important for people to show up ON TIME for sounds checks I'm just saying😁
Poor piano. No wonder it’s so out of tune. As a piano tuner, no wonder I find so many broken strings and hammer and so disastrously out of tune! The piano is being beaten into the ground! Go easy on it!
The accompanist speaking here (from the video), come down and play it since you’ve felt obligated to comment on its condition. The action is terrible and has been terrible for many years in addition to improper mic-ing etc.
@@GospelAccordingToVinyl Then call a piano technician in, have him regulate the action, tune it, then have a sound technician mic the piano accordingly. Getting the action regulated will go along way toward the piano playing and sounding better
@@carryfreak5059 An accompanist and piano technician speaking here - Do you have an idea what it's like to go any play in venues, with different pianos of different age and quality? You get what you get, and tease the most music you can from it. He is a fine, fine pianist. He isn't pushing the piano any harder than it can be pushed. No damage is being done here. In my experience broken strings are invariably broken by crap piano tuners, NOT players. Do you know how a piano action works? You'd have to drop a 300lbs man on his ass on a keyboard to realistically have any chance of breaking a hammer. Give him a break
@@numbersix1908 As a fellow piano technician AND player I have broken my fair share of strings but I’m not a crap tuner. You have never broken a string?!