mattw wrote:Kurt, in a book I have that is now torn and tattered after much 9th grade perusing wrote:
...if [Steve] would've had it his way, it would've came out a lot raunchier than it did. He likes to mix the vocals at unnecessarily low levels. That's not the way we sound good.
I think this was him being somewhat sarcastic, as he also mentions mics being taped all over the wall, on the floor etc. Maybe that's how it was recorded, although as I understand it, he'll only use 3 or 4 mics (if that) to record the drums. Maybe someone who has recorded with Steve can testify whether or not he has taped a mic to their forehead.
matt
we've used anywhere from two to twenty mics on a drum kit, depending on what we're after
i think this vocals thing is self-fulfilling
basically, steve will do whatever people want. some people want their vocals loud, and some people want 'em totally submerged.
but....
a LOT of recording engineers will essentially insist on preferring the almighty vocal to the rest of the music. especially if they are being paid by a big record company.
hence, if you want a record that sound like a band playing music together and not a bunch of stuff backing up a singer, you can get steve to do that, whomever is footing the bill. not everyone is willing to do what a band wants in that situation.
recorded sound like _rid of me_ or the original mix of _in utero_ is not the result of oppression or imposition or whatever
it is the result of freedom from the normal restrictions of making a normal-sounding record with normal recording techniques, which paradoxically lean on artifice far more than anything steve does