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| Recording Forum Trade studio secrets! Get advice on gear, production, monitoring, mastering, and room design. |
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#21 |
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old guy
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: the LBC
Posts: 16,043
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I'll ditto the optimal amount of rehearsing. I figured marcher was just trying to make a point, though. For most bands you meet at the journeyman-and-below level, it's still better to be over-rehearsed than under-rehearsed though, seems to me. Let the master jam band guys have their head... but if the heavily arranged metal band or the tight, teen-pop band doesn't have their act together, it's going to make it a lot harder to get a coherent, locked in recording.
But one of my complaints coming up (coming out of the 70s and going into the 80s, let's put an era on it) was that way too many studio recordings were far too manicured and sterile sounding -- and that was, to some very real extent, true -- but the antidote -- I found out the hard way -- was not necessarily the other extreme. (That seems a general lesson that life keeps reiterating. Sensible, reasonable answers in any well-considered field or topic are seldom found on the fringes.) |
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#22 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,925
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Biggest mistake number 2 I have encountered is.
Not listening to the engineer. Was guilty of it in my teens. |
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: ATX
Posts: 2,516
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Oh, so we can get into more general stuff?
Not having good songs.
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#24 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Mid-west USA
Posts: 59
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Good songs are vital.
But don't they record "bad" songs in great studios every day?
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What's it sound like?
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#25 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: ATX
Posts: 2,516
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For money, sure.
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#26 |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: LOUISVILLE, KY
Posts: 910
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I also think that how well they know the material should at least be indirectly proportionate to how good of musicians they are.
For example, the band I'm recording now is more of a Jason Mraz pop rock type thing. Their lead guitarist came in with hardly anything "written" for the song, but he's a good musician, so between the two of us we knocked out a song in about 2 hours. I wouldn't recommend this with drums or rhythm, but some musicians can pull off improv with the right amount of direction (or in my case, being engineered by a guitarist who specializes in song writing!)
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#27 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 37
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Asking me to record their band.
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#28 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada
Posts: 426
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Quote:
So, yeah, a mistake I've seen is deleting the scratch tracks and rough takes. Ya never know. Hold on to them if you can.
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#29 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 97
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On the other side of the glass, I've worked with an engineer who doesn't care about tone, just the notes. He figures it's easier to add digi effects than do the work of making it sound good live in his room. THAT'S annoying. He's good on everything else (keys, piano, brass, drums) though, so I keep going to him.
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#30 |
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old guy
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: the LBC
Posts: 16,043
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Thanks, it was off the top of my head (although mostly established and widely understsood wisdom), so it's certainly not complete... While there's not much new thinking there, I certainly had plenty of occasions to verify that wisdom in practical reality... often by violating those common sense rules and paying the consequences.
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#31 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Port Charlotte FL
Posts: 110
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Well, it looks like the major points of pre-production have been well covered by blue & others (material/arrangement/rehearsal/studio logistics), so I'll move onto the next big point: instrument/gear preparation.
It never ceases to amaze me how many bands show up expecting to record with gear that is in appalling condition. Guitars with screwed up intonation, fret buzz, dead spots, flakey electronics, etc. Drums with played out heads, not tuned, cracked cymbals, flakey hardware (kick pedals & hi-hats, usually). Amps needing service - bad hum, bad tubes, intermittent jacks, blown speakers... These are things that need to be addressed a few days (or sometimes weeks) before the band sets foot in the studio. Scott |
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