R
rocknrollstar
New member
Well I went to an upmarket studio, got a recording done and whilst it sounds "nice" - little verb, very smooth - at first I liked it - now I hate it. No disrespect to said studio or producer, but I want live and filthy. I think recording guitar and voice seperate lost some of the energy of the performance. Various people I've talked to think the same, however this is NOT an attack at the producer (and I am actually returning to him for other genres of music) it's just in this particular instance, it doesn't fit (and yes I did ask to do both guitar and voice together)
I want to record acoustic songs, I insist on singing and playing at the same time - I want a performance. I despise chorus and reverb anywhere near my guitar.
For information, this to me would be an ideal production to follow: Bob Dylan - You're No Good - YouTube
At the moment, I have a Large Diaphragm Condenser (Audio Technica AT2020) and a Small condenser (Rode m3). I record onto a Scarlett 2i4, untreated room, using Ableton.
Mics I have but don't use would also be a Samson Co1, Samson co2 and a Shure PG57.
Any thoughts where I go from here? Can only record 2 mics at once due to Scarlett.
I want to record acoustic songs, I insist on singing and playing at the same time - I want a performance. I despise chorus and reverb anywhere near my guitar.
For information, this to me would be an ideal production to follow: Bob Dylan - You're No Good - YouTube
At the moment, I have a Large Diaphragm Condenser (Audio Technica AT2020) and a Small condenser (Rode m3). I record onto a Scarlett 2i4, untreated room, using Ableton.
Mics I have but don't use would also be a Samson Co1, Samson co2 and a Shure PG57.
Any thoughts where I go from here? Can only record 2 mics at once due to Scarlett.
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