Wow. Hot topic.
No offense, but most of the posts are still dealing primarily with hero-worship:
"It's more fun to work with, and it's a real joy to watch them do their thing. Someone that needs band-aids to be passable is a sham on the industry, and an insult to other musicians."
"Damn, heaven forbid should some moron be denied the right to do something they can't."
"More like Tools of repression, repression of mistakes, failures, and images."
I'm no huge fan of modern music (and listen to as little as possible), but I think you're letting the music from the last 50 years off the hook with this gloom-and-doom auto-tune forecast. I'm not so sure that the concerts from the last several years were as stellar as we're all remembering. How many of us can claim that the bulk of the concerts we've seen were as good as the album performances?
I'm not trying to rain on anyone's parade or pick a fight, and I'm hardly offended. In fact, I feel like I'm one of the few here that's NOT outraged. I guess I simply don't care how "talented" an artist is, since it seems like most of the real musical decisions are being (and have been made) by the producers, recording engineers, and composers. I'm interested in the final product: what I hear on the album. That it would not sound the same in concert does not bother me because I consider the two seperate entities.
I do not care whether or not the artist had to, at any point, "get it right" if the final product is good music nonetheless (though it often is not) - I'm interested in the music, not the artist.
And, for what it's worth, I'm not sure we're really picking fair fights. I think we're rather pitting the best of the last several decades to make points against this one. Obviously Sinatra is a better musician than T-Pain.
::cue flaming::