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  2. Backing track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backing_track

    A solo steel drum player performs with the accompaniment of pre-recorded backing tracks that are being played back by the laptop on the left of the photo.. A backing track is an audio recording on audiotape, CD or a digital recording medium or a MIDI recording of synthesized instruments, sometimes of purely rhythmic accompaniment, often of a rhythm section or other accompaniment parts that ...

  3. Offstage musicians and singers in popular music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offstage_musicians_and...

    Backing tracks can be as simple as a single prerecorded instrument, such as a recording of a pipe organ, which is impossible to move onstage, to string section recordings done in the studio, to full rhythm section recordings with bass, guitar, keyboards and drums. Some backing tracks also include backup vocals.

  4. The Wrecking Crew (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wrecking_Crew_(music)

    Unlike earlier bands/artists such as the Monkees, the Grass Roots, the Partridge Family and David Cassidy that often utilized the Wrecking Crew for backing tracks (and as a backing band for Cassidy's earliest concert tours of America in 1971/2), rock groups in the early to mid 1970s began to stipulate in their recording contracts that they be ...

  5. Instrumental - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrumental

    Example from Free Music Archive, Steve Combs & Delta Is - "Theme Q", bass, drum, guitar, keyboard, 4 min 53 s. In commercial popular music, instrumental tracks are sometimes renderings, remixes of a corresponding release that features vocals, but they may also be compositions originally conceived without vocals.

  6. Session musician - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Session_musician

    Session musicians are used when musical skills are needed on a short-term basis. Typically, session musicians are used by recording studios to provide backing tracks for other musicians for recording sessions and live performances, recording music for advertising, film, television, and theatre.

  7. Sound and Vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_and_Vision

    Like its parent album Low, "Sound and Vision" was co-produced by David Bowie and Tony Visconti, with contributions from multi-instrumentalist Brian Eno. [7] The backing tracks were recorded at the Château d'Hérouville in Hérouville, France, in September 1976, and Bowie's vocals and other overdubs were recorded at Hansa Studios in West Berlin in October and November. [8]

  8. Backing vocalist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backing_vocalist

    A backing vocalist is a singer who provides vocal harmony with the lead vocalist or other backing vocalists. A backing vocalist may also sing alone as a lead-in to the main vocalist's entry or to sing a counter-melody. Backing vocalists are used in a broad range of popular music, traditional music, and world music styles.

  9. Karaoke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karaoke

    A person singing karaoke in Hong Kong ("Run Away from Home" by Janice Vidal). Karaoke (/ ˌ k ær i ˈ oʊ k i /; [1] Japanese: ⓘ; カラオケ, clipped compound of Japanese kara 空 "empty" and ōkesutora オーケストラ "orchestra") is a type of interactive entertainment system usually offered in clubs and bars, where people sing along to pre-recorded accompaniment using a microphone.