B
Bob's Mods
New member
Inspiration...writing working style.
So what have we learned so far....that many people (at least 1/3+ so far) who get into home recording think they are going to sound like their favorite big artist when they start their own recording adventure. But with an untreated inadequate room, el cheapo Chinese mics, cheap instruments and amps, limited recording experience and crummy simulators (talent set aside)....your mixes are just not going to come up to that commercial standard. You are only going to sound like what you got and how good you are musically. You are not going to sound as good as your favorite commerical artist who works with the pros. That does not mean that once you learn the technical ropes AND have some musical ability, that you still can't shine. I've done some wonderfully sounding mixes. My mixes may not go the extra mile in sounding Steely Dan great but the good ones sound good and the average listener is not the wiser and enjoys them just the same I find.
Another related subject....I have noticed that no matter how inspired my own works may feel, they do not always translate into a good sounding tune. Some do, some don't. I think thats how a really good artist works anyway. They get inspiration, they do demo recordings, they listen to a group of them then pick the ones that jump out of the pile. It can take some time to really impart that musical "stamp" to your mixes. Some of your grooves will have that swing and others will not. Sometimes its simply a matter of re-recording one or two of the core tracks in a new way that can make all the diffference. You've got to keep writing and recording then separate the good from the bad and the just plain ugly.
There are many artist that record everything they write thinking its inspired. They are too close to their own material and may not hear it as others do. As a result there will only be one or two good mixes on an album. This in not how I work. The idea is to write, write and write then cherry pick from your pile and put those on your album compilation. The Paul MaCartney's Cherry album mentioned earlier or whatever it was called was him digging through his pile of discarded ideas from his Beatle days. He wanted to release something after the break up of the Beatles and was not ready with material in the way he usually worked. That home recorded album had a one or two good mixes on it and that was it for my tastes. I think even one song was called Junk. My point here is that even once you perfect your recording environment and tecnique to whatever level you can live with.....your approach to writing will greatly effect how musical your mixes be (this is an oh so subjective subject).
Bob
So what have we learned so far....that many people (at least 1/3+ so far) who get into home recording think they are going to sound like their favorite big artist when they start their own recording adventure. But with an untreated inadequate room, el cheapo Chinese mics, cheap instruments and amps, limited recording experience and crummy simulators (talent set aside)....your mixes are just not going to come up to that commercial standard. You are only going to sound like what you got and how good you are musically. You are not going to sound as good as your favorite commerical artist who works with the pros. That does not mean that once you learn the technical ropes AND have some musical ability, that you still can't shine. I've done some wonderfully sounding mixes. My mixes may not go the extra mile in sounding Steely Dan great but the good ones sound good and the average listener is not the wiser and enjoys them just the same I find.
Another related subject....I have noticed that no matter how inspired my own works may feel, they do not always translate into a good sounding tune. Some do, some don't. I think thats how a really good artist works anyway. They get inspiration, they do demo recordings, they listen to a group of them then pick the ones that jump out of the pile. It can take some time to really impart that musical "stamp" to your mixes. Some of your grooves will have that swing and others will not. Sometimes its simply a matter of re-recording one or two of the core tracks in a new way that can make all the diffference. You've got to keep writing and recording then separate the good from the bad and the just plain ugly.
There are many artist that record everything they write thinking its inspired. They are too close to their own material and may not hear it as others do. As a result there will only be one or two good mixes on an album. This in not how I work. The idea is to write, write and write then cherry pick from your pile and put those on your album compilation. The Paul MaCartney's Cherry album mentioned earlier or whatever it was called was him digging through his pile of discarded ideas from his Beatle days. He wanted to release something after the break up of the Beatles and was not ready with material in the way he usually worked. That home recorded album had a one or two good mixes on it and that was it for my tastes. I think even one song was called Junk. My point here is that even once you perfect your recording environment and tecnique to whatever level you can live with.....your approach to writing will greatly effect how musical your mixes be (this is an oh so subjective subject).
Bob
Last edited: