M
MrLip
New member
Here's the scenerio:
I'm producing a song written by this girl who sings and plays the piano. The song is for a compilation album that we're making at my university (practically 0 budget, we're doing almost everything by ourselves.) The original demo was simply a piano demo; just her singing with a simple piano accompaniment. So I asked her if she would mind me arranging it a little (ie. adding drums, bass, etc.) She said that's fine with her. The song is a mid-tempo pop-jazz tune.
So, I had her play her piano part on a keyboard and tracked as a MIDI track. I took the midi file home, imported it into Cakewalk and assigned it to a piano patch on my Roland JV-1010. Then spent hours editing it, fixing all her mistakes and bad timing (not much fun.) Then I had a drummer friend of mine come in and sequence a drum part using some of my samples and some of the drum sounds on my JV-1010.
When it was about 80% finished, I made a tape for her to listen to. She was OK with it but she said that she wasn't completely satisfied with the piano sound and asked if she could go into a studio and play a real piano.
Now, a couple questions:
#1. What's wrong with my piano sound? I used the "9ft Grand 1" patch on my Roland JV. It sounds fine to me! Is she being too picky? I haven't mixed or added any effects (such as reverb) yet, maybe that has something to do with it. The part is very simple, mostly just chords and very little melodic playing which leads to the next question:
#2. Should I let her go into a studio? She's willing to pay for it herself, but it's just a simple rhythm part, and plus, her playing on the keyboard I recorded was pretty shakey. In fact, I had to do it twice. The first time I had her come in to play it, I wasn't too picky because I just figured I could go home and edit the MIDI, BUT it turned out to be too much work. So I had her go practice with a metronome and then re-recorded the part, and even then I still had to edit. If we were to go into the studio, I would have to be pretty damn sure she can play the part pretty damn near perfectly, right? Because if we record a real piano, I'll be coming home with an AUDIO track which is alot more difficult to edit.
#3. How about the drums? If we were going to go into the studio for any reason at all, to me, it makes the most sense to record live DRUMS, not live piano. Her piano part is a simple rhythm part in which, at least to me, the patches on my JV-1010 will suffice. I feel that if we're going to go into the studio to track anything at all (which I was trying to stay away from, just to keep things simple, and to keep costs down) we might as well do live drums too.
Which leads to another question:
#4. If I were to do live drums and live piano, should I complete the song using MIDI first and then later go in to the studio to replace the existing MIDI tracks (for example, sequence and record everything first (including vocals, guitars, etc.), and then go back and redo the drums and piano in the studio) or should I go back and do the live piano and drum tracks first before continuing tracking the other parts of the song?
Sorry this post has gotten pretty long and tedious. I'm a little lost myself.
I'm sort of in a dilemma. I want her (the artist) to be happy, but at the same time, we obviously don't agree with each other. So.... what should I do?
Here are my options:
A. Stick to 'my way' using as much MIDI as possible. (Less money, increased editing capabilities, less artist-satisfaction, low risk)
B. Do it 'her way' and track live piano (more artist-satisfaction, more money, decreased editing, high risk)
C. Track live piano AND live drums (more artist-satisfaction, more money, decreased editing, and if we're going to track piano we might as well track drums as well, high risk)
In the end, I have the final say as I am pretty much in charge of this project. Just wondering what you guys think I should do.
I'm producing a song written by this girl who sings and plays the piano. The song is for a compilation album that we're making at my university (practically 0 budget, we're doing almost everything by ourselves.) The original demo was simply a piano demo; just her singing with a simple piano accompaniment. So I asked her if she would mind me arranging it a little (ie. adding drums, bass, etc.) She said that's fine with her. The song is a mid-tempo pop-jazz tune.
So, I had her play her piano part on a keyboard and tracked as a MIDI track. I took the midi file home, imported it into Cakewalk and assigned it to a piano patch on my Roland JV-1010. Then spent hours editing it, fixing all her mistakes and bad timing (not much fun.) Then I had a drummer friend of mine come in and sequence a drum part using some of my samples and some of the drum sounds on my JV-1010.
When it was about 80% finished, I made a tape for her to listen to. She was OK with it but she said that she wasn't completely satisfied with the piano sound and asked if she could go into a studio and play a real piano.
Now, a couple questions:
#1. What's wrong with my piano sound? I used the "9ft Grand 1" patch on my Roland JV. It sounds fine to me! Is she being too picky? I haven't mixed or added any effects (such as reverb) yet, maybe that has something to do with it. The part is very simple, mostly just chords and very little melodic playing which leads to the next question:
#2. Should I let her go into a studio? She's willing to pay for it herself, but it's just a simple rhythm part, and plus, her playing on the keyboard I recorded was pretty shakey. In fact, I had to do it twice. The first time I had her come in to play it, I wasn't too picky because I just figured I could go home and edit the MIDI, BUT it turned out to be too much work. So I had her go practice with a metronome and then re-recorded the part, and even then I still had to edit. If we were to go into the studio, I would have to be pretty damn sure she can play the part pretty damn near perfectly, right? Because if we record a real piano, I'll be coming home with an AUDIO track which is alot more difficult to edit.
#3. How about the drums? If we were going to go into the studio for any reason at all, to me, it makes the most sense to record live DRUMS, not live piano. Her piano part is a simple rhythm part in which, at least to me, the patches on my JV-1010 will suffice. I feel that if we're going to go into the studio to track anything at all (which I was trying to stay away from, just to keep things simple, and to keep costs down) we might as well do live drums too.
Which leads to another question:
#4. If I were to do live drums and live piano, should I complete the song using MIDI first and then later go in to the studio to replace the existing MIDI tracks (for example, sequence and record everything first (including vocals, guitars, etc.), and then go back and redo the drums and piano in the studio) or should I go back and do the live piano and drum tracks first before continuing tracking the other parts of the song?
Sorry this post has gotten pretty long and tedious. I'm a little lost myself.
I'm sort of in a dilemma. I want her (the artist) to be happy, but at the same time, we obviously don't agree with each other. So.... what should I do?
Here are my options:
A. Stick to 'my way' using as much MIDI as possible. (Less money, increased editing capabilities, less artist-satisfaction, low risk)
B. Do it 'her way' and track live piano (more artist-satisfaction, more money, decreased editing, high risk)
C. Track live piano AND live drums (more artist-satisfaction, more money, decreased editing, and if we're going to track piano we might as well track drums as well, high risk)
In the end, I have the final say as I am pretty much in charge of this project. Just wondering what you guys think I should do.