Re: Studio pitfalls to be aware of
11The biggest studio pitfall is bass players, from what I've heard.
Total_douche, MSW, LICSW (lulz)
Yep, all this. Not to say your stuff needs to sound perfect after 1 or 2 takes, but just keep the energetic performances and spot fix from there. Don't make the drummer do 5 takes because the bassist keeps beefing 1 riff, etc.wot wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 1:30 pmThat quote has more to do with the energy and enthusiasm of the first takes dissipating into frustrated/mechanical playing. Your 12th take won't be any more "decent" than the first few takes on the same recording date.oZZma wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 1:08 pmI wonder what do those of you who work in a studio think about beginners/sloppy musicians coming to record… Those needing many takes to have a decent one. Just wondering if it's better to spare myself the humilation.penningtron wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 8:38 am The 2nd or 3rd take might be better than the first. The 8th will definitely not be.
You should be comfortable with your song before showing up to a recording date - for the money you've put on the line, for you/your band/the engineer's time, hell for your confidence in making music.
Sloppy musicianship can absolutely be utilized to make cool music, but for god's sake, believe in your slop. There's no reason to book a studio if you still haven't practiced the song.
I've recorded bands that were not great musicians who were prepared (to the best of their ability), and also recorded great musicians who came in unprepared. I prefer the former.oZZma wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 1:08 pmI wonder what do those of you who work in a studio think about beginners/sloppy musicians coming to record… Those needing many takes to have a decent one. Just wondering if it's better to spare myself the humilation.penningtron wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 8:38 am The 2nd or 3rd take might be better than the first. The 8th will definitely not be.
Wowza in Kalamazoo wrote: ...the noise of divorce...
As a bassist, I've always found it super helpful (not just for recording) to have some practices with just the drummer, so you can be super locked in and know the structure without guitar/vocals.Bernardo wrote: Tue May 18, 2021 3:38 pm
- I suggest rehearsing your songs without the vocals to get used to the structure without that reference
Return to “General Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: joe_lmr and 1 guest