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Recording Tips
37
great
common-sense tips and techniques were culled from some
of the country’s top
studio and mastering engineers.
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Before you go into the studio
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1 |
Record your songs during live gigs and
pre-production rehearsals. Even a simple
cassette recording on a boom box may reveal weak
parts of songs. |
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2 |
Have all musical and vocal parts worked out.
(Know your guitar solos!) |
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3 |
Using a computer or sequencer? Prepare all
sequenced material before the session. |
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4 |
Make sure your drummer is comfortable playing to
a click track. (To get “tight,” practice to a
click track at a very slow tempo.) |
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5 |
Rehearse more songs than you plan to record.
You never know which songs will sound strong on
the final tape. (If you plan to have a
four-song EP, prepare six songs just in case.) |
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6 |
Take care of your body before and during your
recording sessions. Eat well, get enough sleep,
and keep your ears rested and clear. |
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Setting
Up
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7 |
Be early! The clock starts running whether
you’re there or not. |
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8 |
Make the studio a comfortable and relaxed
place. If it’s not, it will show in your
finished product. |
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9 |
Make sure you and the engineer have the same
“vision” — go over your songs with him/her
before recording. Before booking your studio
time, ask to hear other material the engineer
recorded. |
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10 |
Depending on whether your studio has 8, 16, 24,
or 48-track capability, plan out how you will
leave room for the essential parts. This should
simplify the mix and eliminate the need for
bouncing tracks later. |
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11 |
Use new strings, cords, drum sticks and heads —
and bring spares! |
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12 |
Find out the hours of the local music store just
in case... |
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13 |
Don’t use new gear or different equipment that
you haven’t used before, even it it’s “better
than what you have.” Surprises can cause
problems. |
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The
Recording Process
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14 |
Remember, it’s emotion and feeling that make the
best song, not necessarily the best technical
rendition. |
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15 |
If you mess up a part while recording, don’t
stop and start over. That can easily cause you
to burn out. Instead, have the engineer punch
in the correction. |
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16 |
You don’t have to fill all the tracks on the
tape — don’t try to force something that won’t
fit. |
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17 |
Always keep in mind the focus of your music. If
it’s the vocals, plan to spend the most time on
them. Don’t waste time on things that don’t
highlight the focal point. |
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18 |
Get the sound you want while recording. (Never
assume that you can fix it in the mix.) |
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19 |
Record individual tracks clean, and add effects
later. |
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20 |
Don’t necessarily double track everything.
Doubling a lead vocal can hide all the
subtleties that make a song personal and likable
(although it can work well for a chorus). |
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21 |
Know when to quit for the day. If you’re tired,
it will show. |
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22 |
Keep guests out! It’s your recording. Guests
will distract you and may sway your opinion of
how the music should sound. |
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23 |
Make backup copies after every recording
session. |
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24 |
Tune up often. |
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25 |
Singers: always bring water, but don’t use
ice! Ice constricts your vocal chords. Hot tea
with lemon and honey works just as well. |
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26 |
Always get a track listing and accurate time log
from the studio. |
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Monitoring
The Mix
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27 |
Listen to your music at moderate levels in your
car or on a boom box. This is how most of your
fans will listen to it, and mixing at loud
levels will fatigue your ears and distort the
“true” sound. |
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28 |
Sometimes it’s good to take a day off and come
back to listen; ears don’t last very long in the
studio! |
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29 |
As you review each mix, make sure you can
comfortably hear all of the instruments. Tweak
the mix on a small pair of speakers at an
extremely low volume. You should be able to
pick up each instrument even at this level. |
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30 |
Know when to quit for the day. You’re better
off quitting a session early when you’re tired
than wasting time making a bad mix that will
have to be redone anyway. |
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Mixing
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31 |
Listen in the studio to CDs you’re used to
hearing on your home stereo, to get an idea of
how the studio’s system sounds. |
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32 |
Determine a band spokesperson ahead of time. An
engineer getting five different opinions on how
to mix will grow tired and try to rush through
the job. |
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33 |
Once you have selected an engineer (or a
producer) to mix your recording, trust them to
do a first mix. Their ears are better trained
than yours. Try to keep an open mind. |
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34 |
Think about the songs as a whole, and not just
the individual instruments. Otherwise everyone
will want their instrument louder in the mix. |
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35 |
If mixing somewhere other than the recording
studio, make sure you use the same speakers. If
not, the mix will sound completely different. |
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36 |
Decide which format you want the finished mixes
to be on: DAT, one-off CD, PMCD, reel-to-reel,
or 1630. (Your studio may not offer every
option.) Use the format that is most practical
and economical for you. |
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37 |
Count on and budget for unforeseen delays. |
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Extra Bonus Tip |
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Always, always, always make a safety CD copy. or
backup to your hardrive DVD , or external
hardrive!
Happy Recording !
Tony Ray Jones-Backwoods
Recording Studio- 2008 |
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