J
Jouni
New member
Heeellllllyyyeah!...
This is more a studio-related than a home-recording question.
Lets presume there is a band that's recording a full-length album and are promised a deal to market and spread it by some company, but they are on their own while producing the album. Their drummer is also completely handicapped concerning clicktracks.
So, I'm thinking it would be a lot less hassle to go to a studio, and record the songs in a big room, all playing simultaniously. Less studio hours to pay for, and better "swing" than the method of all playing by themselves to a clicktrack??
Am I right or wrong there?
Also, what other concerns there would be than the un-avoidable bleed from an instrument to another??
Could a good recording engineer reduce that bleed to an insignificant one?
Playing all together "live" would also help out some rhythm-changes that are tricky against a clicktrack...
This is more a studio-related than a home-recording question.
Lets presume there is a band that's recording a full-length album and are promised a deal to market and spread it by some company, but they are on their own while producing the album. Their drummer is also completely handicapped concerning clicktracks.

So, I'm thinking it would be a lot less hassle to go to a studio, and record the songs in a big room, all playing simultaniously. Less studio hours to pay for, and better "swing" than the method of all playing by themselves to a clicktrack??
Am I right or wrong there?
Also, what other concerns there would be than the un-avoidable bleed from an instrument to another??
Could a good recording engineer reduce that bleed to an insignificant one?
Playing all together "live" would also help out some rhythm-changes that are tricky against a clicktrack...