grn said:
you're missing a lot of great music if you won't record anything that cannot be reproduced live by four or five guys playing instruments and singing... some studio only shit is mind blowing
I disagree 100%.
I have little respect for bands or "artists" that rely on loops, samples, and automated equipment, and pre recorded ....stuff. I like it when it's used tastefully and in limited quantities, but RELYING on it is weak. It is, for lack of a better word, cheating. Those people cheat their way past a TON of critical lessons every recording musician SHOULD know, but most totally disregard. You will never fully acheive your potential if you
rely on machines to play music for you.
I have heard "mind blowing" studio creations and to be honest they lack the emotional connectivity that (to me) metal is all about. Besides, if you need loops, samples, and automated equipment to make your point, you lack musical talent. Don't freak out now...that just my OPINION!!

I have seen and heard countless examples of jaw dropping playing, song writing, and singing that has so much emotional impact that I cannot use words to explain. You cannot substitute real human talent and emotion with a programmed machine. But it sure is easier to learn.
But if you are speaking ONLY about the actual SOUND....then yeah, shit fabricated in the studio without the use of musical instruments has no noise, is always perfectly executed, pitch and tonality is always perfect, it is a superior SOUND. But music is WAY more than sound.
I'll clarify one thing: Keyboards count as an instument to me, as long as they not just being used to trigger sound bytes, loops, and other nonsense.
Sonixx said:
why
wizardry and magic are the studio's forte... otherwise it's called a live performance...
Not so. PERFECTION is the forte of the studio. Capturing a PERFECT performance is what I use my studio for. If it is not prefect you must do it again and again untill it is. If you do not WANT to do it perfectly, I will point you in the direction of several studios that will be happy to record sub-par performances. Good enough will not cut it. And if you cannot play it with your own hands, I will not record it. Once the performance is captured I embellish the sound with the typical techniques, but by no means am I or will I fabricarte something that is not already in the music. These guidelines benefit me AND the person/people I am recording.
But of course, I have been called a nazi, hardass, a perfectionist, and my points often go unrecognized as I try to explain the difference between "right" and "close". Most people just can't hear the difference and it makes me nuts. But the finished product always makes the people happy.
I'll stop now.
