
antichef
pornk rock
I've been reading this board for a while, and it's awesome there are so many frequent posters who are either professionals or folks who have a lot of experience with commercial or semi-commercial recording. I'm not one of them. I've learned a lot on this board, but also learned how much I still need to learn. I've also cobbled together a modest pro-sumer studio. At least for now, the only people I'm tracking are myself, family, and friends -- that is, musicians that I'm in the position to ask a lot from in terms of time, technique, and sound.
To those of you who do this commercially, this question has been bugging me: how much of your equipment, skill, and time is devoted to dealing with issues that would not exist if the musicians you tracked had optimal sound and technique, etc.? Put another way, how much of your equipment/skill wouldn't you need, and how much more time would you have if you could expect each musician to do a perfect(ish) performance with good mic technique, tuned drums, good amp sound, etc.?
The reason I'm asking is that I suspect that if I focus on the musicianship side of things (over which I have a lot of control for now), I can avoid some big expenses on the recording/mixing equipment side. Skills are nice no matter what, but I want to focus on what's most important, and I realize that good musicianship requires practice and time, but I suspect that more time is spent by engineers trying to fix problems than would have been spent by musicians practicing a little more in order to avoid them in the first place.
To those of you who do this commercially, this question has been bugging me: how much of your equipment, skill, and time is devoted to dealing with issues that would not exist if the musicians you tracked had optimal sound and technique, etc.? Put another way, how much of your equipment/skill wouldn't you need, and how much more time would you have if you could expect each musician to do a perfect(ish) performance with good mic technique, tuned drums, good amp sound, etc.?
The reason I'm asking is that I suspect that if I focus on the musicianship side of things (over which I have a lot of control for now), I can avoid some big expenses on the recording/mixing equipment side. Skills are nice no matter what, but I want to focus on what's most important, and I realize that good musicianship requires practice and time, but I suspect that more time is spent by engineers trying to fix problems than would have been spent by musicians practicing a little more in order to avoid them in the first place.