lexdrummer said:
if I mix up a soft drink in my home and serve it to ten people who honestly think it tastes excellent, should i worry about the professional aspects of the mix? Fact is, I mixed up a helluva magic with a plastic spoon and 2 quarty jug. The pepsi Factory and lab were not at my disposal. Did I succeed?
I say listen more, disect less, and we will all find that even a recording from a couple hundred dollars worth of gear done properly can be slapped on plastic and sold to listeners who enjoy it.
http://3box3.com/grampahs_hats_sunshine_lady.htm
two fifty dollar mics, one take with a guitar solo dub five minutes later. Standard stage cords shot through two ratty old MP Tube pres to a $50 special tascam 4 track with only the left meter in working condition.
I've mixed thousands of microphones through the years on great gear, todays cheap stuff is getting better. This little test simply illustrates the exact thread, only regressively. I did throw the tracks into computer via direct unbalanced RCA, but I did NOT plugin stamp the hell out of them. Just a little "free" plugin verb to take the dead out and a little EQ (not much). The track is not production perfect and was not even focused on mastering wise. But it's an excellent "what about recording with today's lawn sale gear" test.
lexdrummer,
i like the clip, exceptionaly clean for something recorded on a 4 track..
i know this is not exactly on topic, but nevertheless, i think it might be of some importance...for instance, i have all albums, bootlegs and whatnot, all you can imagine from my favourite band, the red house painters...but what i find myself going for, more and more in the last 4 or 5 months, is the 4 track demos they produced in the earlier years...i mean the albums are lo-fi enough you know, all amps were solid state in the beggining, not recorded on great studios, reverb drenched, etc...i love all of that, and still do, but, even though that sound has a great (for me) fingerprint, i find the 4 track demos much more interesting now...more appealing to me than the actual albums..and im going through this phase where i try to get the initial demos of every band i really like...for instance i got some dead can dance demos, and i feel exactly the same way..much more interesting than the actual albums, at this point (cause i know every album back and forth - yes, but im really sure thats not the only reason)...
i find that, most ppl, when refering to "studio quality" or whatever, look for clean, pristine, etc...the sound that really appeals to me has absolutely nothing to do with that. and im not refering to lo-fi either...i want stuff to sound
interesting....for instance, my main concern with my personal demos, is not a clean sound..my one true obssession is wether or not im getting enough 3D feel and dimension from the mic and the pre, especially on vocals...if that quality is not there, it just sounds fake (to me)...once that's there, the rest is welcome, as long as its not a brutal hum or sizzle or whatever...it just adds to it.
of course this is not something one would want in classical music recording for instance...but for my stuff, i think it does wonders, especially if my room sucks (it clearly does)..lots of fx - wisely used of course; tape saturation, whatever...its all good.
a bit more on topic...how does everyone think most small indie labels record their albums...
most of the indies i know, that i get music from, that are putting out great music, record in bedrooms, with a lot less than we have avaliable these days. they cant even afford the budget studio across the street..