
WhiteStrat
Don't stare at the eye.
No, my New Year's Resolution isn't to make cheap jazz.
So many of us get caught up in the gear of recording (I know I do!) that I think we forget the music of recording. If I've got all the best gear in the world but don't have a song worth listening to, then I can just hang it up. And even for those of us more into recording others--it still sort of applies. The ears and knowledge are more important than the gear.
I know these kinds of things are said around here a lot, and I always agree, but this year I want to put my money where my mouth is and stop chasing gear, and just get about writing and recording good music--making it the best I can within the limitations of my gear.
So tonight I was goofing around with limitations. I used my cheapest bass (a Squier p-bass from the mid 80's), my cheapest electric (an epi LP--the $149 special), a single cheap microphone ($35 57 knockoff) and my cheapest pre (a channel in a Behringer mixer i bought for $100!!), and my cheapest amp (a solid state 15 watter I bought used for $100). The drums are loops--$50 for a CD full of about 400 or 500.
(FWIW--this was all recorded BELOW the dreaded bedroom volume level. It's 2 am and I just tracked it, with my wife sleeping upstairs. I'm in an untreated room, so I have to keep it down. Bass was DI'd into the mixer, and guitars were all recorded with the amp and mic.)
Don't get me wrong--I like my racks full of pres and comps and everything, and I love having 4 or 5 dozen mics to choose from. And yes, I really love having a bunch of guitars and real drums. But what if I didn't have that stuff? What if I just had a few pieces of cheap gear and some really cool music?
This isn't "really cool" music, just a jam over an old jazz vamp, but if I had to--I could get by. Just something to think about. Happy New Years!
So many of us get caught up in the gear of recording (I know I do!) that I think we forget the music of recording. If I've got all the best gear in the world but don't have a song worth listening to, then I can just hang it up. And even for those of us more into recording others--it still sort of applies. The ears and knowledge are more important than the gear.
I know these kinds of things are said around here a lot, and I always agree, but this year I want to put my money where my mouth is and stop chasing gear, and just get about writing and recording good music--making it the best I can within the limitations of my gear.
So tonight I was goofing around with limitations. I used my cheapest bass (a Squier p-bass from the mid 80's), my cheapest electric (an epi LP--the $149 special), a single cheap microphone ($35 57 knockoff) and my cheapest pre (a channel in a Behringer mixer i bought for $100!!), and my cheapest amp (a solid state 15 watter I bought used for $100). The drums are loops--$50 for a CD full of about 400 or 500.
(FWIW--this was all recorded BELOW the dreaded bedroom volume level. It's 2 am and I just tracked it, with my wife sleeping upstairs. I'm in an untreated room, so I have to keep it down. Bass was DI'd into the mixer, and guitars were all recorded with the amp and mic.)
Don't get me wrong--I like my racks full of pres and comps and everything, and I love having 4 or 5 dozen mics to choose from. And yes, I really love having a bunch of guitars and real drums. But what if I didn't have that stuff? What if I just had a few pieces of cheap gear and some really cool music?
This isn't "really cool" music, just a jam over an old jazz vamp, but if I had to--I could get by. Just something to think about. Happy New Years!
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