Z
Zed10R
New member
Kryptik said:But really, why do engineers expect every musician out there to play perfectly? They're paying you to put their heart and soul on record.....
The question and the answer are both right there. The musicians ARE putting their heart and soul on record. Is their heart and soul a shitty, out of tune, out of time, overly dramatic wank of guitar solo? Sometimes yes, but my point is you should be able to play your own shit pretty damn well. It's just sad if you can't.
[/QUOTE]Something that ticks me off about "professional" engineers is trying to force drummers to play with clicks, forcing the band to track one instrument at a time. Musicians are generally a little insecure in the studio. You're putting a drummer in a cell and forcing him to play in a way that takes alot of adjusting to, and on top of all that you have the rest of the band in the control room where the drummer knows that they can hear his every fault, and yet you still expect him to play well? Geezz, the nerves of playing something that is going to be permanant aloan can make you play like crap, never mind everything else that's going on.[/QUOTE]
See my previous response about musicians needing being able to play their own shit. If you can't play your own shit in time, you suck. Go home and practice. ESPECALLY drummers. A drummer should have no problem playing to a click. A drummers JOB is to KEEP TIME for chrissakes.
[/QUOTE]Keep in mind that they are not paying you to record your record. It is their record. PERIOD. If they just want a hi-fi jam tape with some mistakes punched in, or covered up with reverb, it's your job to give it to them.[/QUOTE]
I agree with you 100%. That is EXACTLY why I personally am very selective about who I record. Thank GOD I don't make my living recording whoever will pay. I'd shoot myself.
