I've just done two recordings of the same piece for an audition tape. Neither recording is perfect, because the piece just isn't 100% there yet. But I have a deadline, so there's nothing I can really do about that now.Anyway, in the first recording, I make fewer mistakes. However, the mistakes I do make are very obvious - I cringe when I hear them. In the second recording, I make more mistakes, but they're a bit more subtle - fingers slipping a little bit, and things that you might not necessarily hear unless you knew the piece. Mistakes aside, I think they're about the same artistically.So my question is, which is a better recording to send in? I wish I could upload them both and ask which sounds better, but unfortunately uploads take a very long time on my computer, so I can't really do that right now.
Use recording technology to fix mistakes, or find someone who can
People do that?! That's absolutely horrifying. I would never want to be so dishonest. It just seems blatantly unfair and wrong to me. Besides, what if I was accepted into the program due to the fake playing, but then found myself to be an inadequate player once I arrived?
Yes, People who know the science and art of recording can polish a recording to sound better. I can see how that seems dishonest, but there is a limit to how much can be fixed anyhow. If you want to send in recorded mistakes that is up to you. You can choose between big mistakes and little mistakes. If I had an important recording for an audition I would want the best person possible to help record it.
It doesn't seem dishonest, it is dishonest. Where even is the art in your playing if you can just edit out the stuff you don't like? It's like autotune.And it's like what chopinlover01 said. I could potentially be taking a spot away from someone else who was more deserving of it. This is a summer program, it's not going to have an affect on the rest of my life. There is no moral justification for "fixing" my videos.
Recording is dishonest within itself