Alright, here we go... 'Real Love' 2025 remix.
Let's not even get into the fact they have an extremely rare and precious moment in music history on tape: George Harrison playing guitar on a John Lennon composition for The Beatles in the 90s, and then ditching it from the verses. Let's just talk about amateurish they made the vocals sound.
The issue is the way they treat demixed audio. Abbey Road Studios have only started using proper source-separation tools on the last couple of projects, even though truly usable vocal–piano separation has existed since for about a decade already. Until recently, they were still proudly stating in press releases things like: “we played the mono orchestra back into a room, recorded it with two mics, and now it’s stereo.”
To be fair, they did make an effort: in the ’90s they used a double-tracked demo from a high-generation cassette dub, one piano-and-vocal track, with an extra vocal and tambourine overdubbed on top. This time they dug out the pre-overdub take (though as said it isn’t fully the same one used here, one verse differs slightly) to get a big advantage in audio quality. But they still have no idea what to do with it after extraction.
Because what they still don’t seem to grasp is that isolating elements is supposed to give you more freedom in the final mix, not be the end goal. Their mindset appears to be: “we’ve isolated it, it’s now clean, job done,” so they leave the track bone-dry and untouched. But the whole point of having a fully isolated element is that you can now treat it like any other clean studio track. You should EQ-match it to a proper 70's Lennon studio vocal, adjust the dynamics so it sits with the ’90s McCartney and Harrison vocals, and add the same room tone or reverb so it blends as if all three recorded together in the same studio. Instead, the Lennon vocal just sounds pasted on top. The irony is that the crude ’90s method of simply fading Lennon's cassette demo in and out created more mix cohesion and Beatles magic than this supposedly state-of-the-art demix-remix.
Free As A Bird suffers from the exact same problem. And though I'm still on a crusade, begging on my knees, in hopes that the future Lennon solo projects will remain clear of Auto-Tune to the point of artifacts warbles like on some 'Mind Games' outtakes, the One To One concerts and the Walls & Bridges teasers like broadcast on SIRIUS a year ago... the pitch correction tools are actually made for a project with this nature. Hearing it so dry only emphasises that Lennon was singing to a home piano that wasn’t perfectly in tune. If you don’t correct that at points (without altering the modulation), his voice will always sound slightly off against modern, perfectly-tuned instrumentation and harmonies, like it does so badly on 'Free As A Bird' now.
And for both songs, the vocals are noticeably out of sync in places. The lack of quality doesn't surprise me any more, but it does make me sad in a way.