Help me not slap the guy recording our demo
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 7:40 pm
He offered to do it for the cost of equipment rental and beer so we said "Yeah." The offer came last week, a couple of days before I went out of town to a folk festival for five days.
The guy we rented equipment from told us on Tuesday night, when we were supposed to start, that his mixing board was broken, which we learned at about 9:30 PM. The dude recording us chastised us for not having our shit together. Additionally, he lectured three of us earlier, while we were jamming and waiting for our second guitarist/recording equipment to show up, on how he didn't want us wasting his time not knowing what we're doing. This was prefaced with "I have a suggestion," which was a pretty passive-aggressive way of doing it.
Last night at 5:30, on my way to pick up dinner for my brother and myself, I get a phone call explaining that we didn't have the stands for the drum mics. Now keep in mind that I'd sent my bassist yesterday afternoon to go get a mixing board and if I'd been told this last night they needed those stands then this wouldn't have been a problem. I run halfway across town to get these microphone stands from the guy who is renting us his microphones and return to them, except he didn't have a stand for the kick drum mic. I'm told that if we don't have that we're fucked, etc. etc. My drummer is freaking out a bit and the guy recording us is pissed off.
I suggest pulling some "Abbey Road shit" and improvising a solution. It is explained to me by the dude recording us that my drummer is putting in time and energy, and he is putting in time and energy, and neither one of them wants it to sound like shit. I suggest that we put together what we have and solve the kick mic problem after that. Eventually, I have the idea of suspending it using a guitar stand. This actually works.
I am then told that we don't have enough headphone cable to reach into whatever he's running the playback out of. I have to run to Wal-Mart and get not one but two extension cables. At about 8:30 - two hours after I first set off to get the drum mics - we finally start trying to record a track, except the drums keep clipping and he keeps freaking out, partially because he's not familiar with that particular make of the mixing board he requested. I have to resist the urge to tell him to just slap a fucking compressor on it and go. We manage to get drums for one track recorded by 10:00.
It has been two days of clusterfuckery and all we have to show for it are two guitar scratch tracks, a vocal scratch track, a drum scratch track and three or four separate lectures from Bob Rock. I am probably supposed to be there right now but frankly I barely have the energy to go over and record a scratch track and then wait for him to know what he's doing for a couple of hours when I could be slapping together a better demo in Garageband.
I guess everyone has recording nightmares and mine could be much worse but Lord above please spare me from cocknuggets like this in the future.
The guy we rented equipment from told us on Tuesday night, when we were supposed to start, that his mixing board was broken, which we learned at about 9:30 PM. The dude recording us chastised us for not having our shit together. Additionally, he lectured three of us earlier, while we were jamming and waiting for our second guitarist/recording equipment to show up, on how he didn't want us wasting his time not knowing what we're doing. This was prefaced with "I have a suggestion," which was a pretty passive-aggressive way of doing it.
Last night at 5:30, on my way to pick up dinner for my brother and myself, I get a phone call explaining that we didn't have the stands for the drum mics. Now keep in mind that I'd sent my bassist yesterday afternoon to go get a mixing board and if I'd been told this last night they needed those stands then this wouldn't have been a problem. I run halfway across town to get these microphone stands from the guy who is renting us his microphones and return to them, except he didn't have a stand for the kick drum mic. I'm told that if we don't have that we're fucked, etc. etc. My drummer is freaking out a bit and the guy recording us is pissed off.
I suggest pulling some "Abbey Road shit" and improvising a solution. It is explained to me by the dude recording us that my drummer is putting in time and energy, and he is putting in time and energy, and neither one of them wants it to sound like shit. I suggest that we put together what we have and solve the kick mic problem after that. Eventually, I have the idea of suspending it using a guitar stand. This actually works.
I am then told that we don't have enough headphone cable to reach into whatever he's running the playback out of. I have to run to Wal-Mart and get not one but two extension cables. At about 8:30 - two hours after I first set off to get the drum mics - we finally start trying to record a track, except the drums keep clipping and he keeps freaking out, partially because he's not familiar with that particular make of the mixing board he requested. I have to resist the urge to tell him to just slap a fucking compressor on it and go. We manage to get drums for one track recorded by 10:00.
It has been two days of clusterfuckery and all we have to show for it are two guitar scratch tracks, a vocal scratch track, a drum scratch track and three or four separate lectures from Bob Rock. I am probably supposed to be there right now but frankly I barely have the energy to go over and record a scratch track and then wait for him to know what he's doing for a couple of hours when I could be slapping together a better demo in Garageband.
I guess everyone has recording nightmares and mine could be much worse but Lord above please spare me from cocknuggets like this in the future.