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Graham Nash and Ann Wilson Speak out on Lip-Syncing in Wake of Frankie Valli Drama

If you have even a marginal internet presence at the moment, youโ€™ve probably heard about the drama going on with Frankie Valli of the Four Seasons. Specifically, a large number of fans are concerned about the 90-year-old singerโ€™s well-being, as video footage of him performing and allegedly lip-syncing with great difficulty has been floating around social media. Valli had to even speak out about it to say he isnโ€™t being forced to perform, nor has he been lip-syncing at all.

Still, the situation has spurred conversations about the ethics of lip-syncing and live performances. And it looks like Graham Nash and Heartโ€™s Ann Wilson have lent their two cents on the matter.

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In a Washington Post interview, Valli was quoted saying he does not lip-sync. Graham Nash was also interviewed for the writeup and gave his (somewhat brutal) thoughts on the matter.

Graham Nash and Ann Wilson Speak Out About Lip-Syncing Live

โ€œFrankie Valli is not singing,โ€ said Nash. โ€œHe’s just lip-syncing badly to a tape. As a musician, if you’re not singing, you shouldnโ€™t be onstage.โ€

The 82-year-old singer/songwriter clarified that as we age, our voices will change; and thereโ€™s no shame in that. He even named his longtime friend Joni Mitchell as an example of how a beautiful voice can change. And he noted that age adds even more charm to one’s voice.

โ€œShe [Joni Mitchell] certainly doesn’t have the top-end range that she used to have,โ€ Nash continued. โ€œBut, at the same time, there is a beauty. What we are getting instead of a top range is incredible phrasing in a lower range.โ€

Unfortunately for Valli, Heartโ€™s iconic rock star crooner Ann Wilson also agreed that she believed he was lip-syncing.

โ€œI think that’s the moment when you have to decide whether to walk offstage or not,โ€ said Wilson in the Washington Post interview. โ€œYou really have to look at your morals and go, โ€˜Do I just want to go up there and phone it in, give a bulls*** performance because I’m me, or do I take the high road?โ€™โ€

Itโ€™s difficult to not agree with both of them. On one hand, even the greatest musicians have to eventually retire. If itโ€™s not possible to sing, or if one is not willing to sing in a voice that is far from identical to the one they had 40 years ago, then it may be time to pack it up. 

On the other hand, thereโ€™s something beautiful about a voice that changes through a decades-long career. Mitchell was just one example. Johnny Cash is another, whose vocals on โ€œHurtโ€ at 71 sound very different from his vocals at 30 years old. However, those older vocal tracks have a haunting and powerful register to them.

As of this writing, Valli still insists he is not lip-syncing.

Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Woman’s Day

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