losthighway wrote: Thu Mar 09, 2023 8:15 pm
Yeah the list of multistudio project albums is incredibly long. Although it's worth noting that most of the ones we know about were handled by engineers who eat, sleep and breath that stuff. For a less experienced engineer it could turn into
a series of songs where some just sound kind of worse than the others, but that's also the least optimistic view.
Well yeah, I mean everything changes when you're in a band, so many more people involved in how the end result turns out. You can't control what happens.
*But if I'm by myself DIY-engineering my own album and I fuck up the sound of my own album through impulsively selling equipment and thusly downgrading fidelity, it just presents the possibility of a worse result. That's the original thought-line of what I was trying to convey. And if it takes years to produce an album, it often isn't all recorded the same exact way. Sometimes you need to sell that $2000 preamp you just tracked 7 songs with, and use it for rent money. And if you happen to record more material without the preamp, bottom line you're hindering uniformity (for better or worse, but it's still changing what could've been uniform).
Obviously with an unlimited budget or a super high budget from a label (or even with incredible engineering skill) this isn't automatically going to happen every-time you switch locations, microphones, setup and all the equipment. And really it's all about the music at the end of the day too.
I bet if you dig into the exact production notes on these multi-studio project albums, there's at least a few examples of the second location's engineer matching the equipment via the label's budget. Like, "Oh, they used such and such preamp for the first half of the record... We're going to need to purchase one of those so it sounds the same."
Maintaining uniformity and just getting the album recorded in one place, with one set of equipment ....as a rule (or starting point, really).... avoids this conversation entirely. Isn't this basic shit? Why is this so hard to understand? But that's not how it works every time, sh*t happens.
Just for fun, lets say you've just tracked a 10 song record at a decent local studio, with pro-level gear and hand it to me, your label A&R and I say, "This is great, but I'm going to delete the first half, destroy those masters and.... Demand you re-record those songs with this--" and hand you a Macbook and a Presonus Firepod. You're gonna be bummed. Or not. Who knows. I've said it all.