K
K-dub
Well-known member
Soon You'll Be Leaving
Music: Me
Lyrics: John McLaughlin
Any/all comments appreciated ...
Best,
Kev-
Music: Me
Lyrics: John McLaughlin
Any/all comments appreciated ...
Best,
Kev-
Incredible job, I loved it. The build ups in the arrangement are very well done. It has an emotional feel I thought was very well done also. What Mic-pre did you use for the vocals? Share some of how you made it? Thanks for posting.
I think you did a nice job. My only nit is with the drums. The drums sound a bit too dry. They sound like they were recorded in a small or completely different space compared to the rest of the instruments. The vocals, piano, & guitars sit well together but to me (and this is just my opinion) the drums seem like they are just in a different space. I'd try different reverb on the drums but that's just me.
I've heard comments of this nature hundreds times ... but that's sort of the challenge faced by all home recordists ... and one of particular peculiar.
We, the band, me, doesn't play in the same room, so we, the band, me, do our/my best to "fake the room" ... and I'm not sure that we, the band, me ... ok, I'll stop that ...
... I'm not certain that I can't do an adequate job of reconstructing what studios do these days too ... for they too, have adapted to the track one performs in NY, then send me your tracks from LA and save the plane ticket and lodging cost too. They so do. So the sound of the times becomes the economic of the times ... not the same room.
Kick must stay dry ... unless it is the right sound otherwise ... God help you with those reverberations.
But, to your point, I added a LOT of back space to the snare ... and I like dry toms and hi hat ... so I almost never add BIG surrounding air to those. I want them heard clear with punch and definition, not confused diffused in a mix ... unless of course that's the sound I want. It's ALL about learning enough how to use the tools available (there aren't a lot) to sculpt the sound you want to hear. One must only learn what they do and how they interact.
I don't know about others here, but this just occurred to me. I (and others I know) have been here a long time. We came seeking knowledge and learned while here through the flame wars that won nothing. (This is NOT a comment on prior post ... just a little acknowledgement of ... here)
What you hear here from me, is partly because of the challenging fires one forges knowledge from the flames here ... and I've still MILES to learn. Sadly, my day gig keeps me tied to what I need to do to pay my bills ... but this is the passion I could do, if only there was any money in it.
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Dude, no need to get you panties all in a wad. You're the one that posted the song asking for comments. I took the time to listen to your song twice and provided my comments that's all. Don't really get your "flame wars" insinuation but whatever....![]()
but for Revolution #9 which to this day I've never listened full through.
Vocals and guitar came out excellent on this. Great clarity without sacrificing depth. I too felt the drums seemed a bit disconnected from the rest sonically, but not 100% sure what it is. Sorry. Not a big deal deal, just stood out a tad. I guess the piano, vocals and guitars seemed to sit together better than the drums did with anything else. Again, not substantial, but you're operating at a level where I'm digging pretty deep here...nice job Kev.