NYMorningstar said:
The point being I agree with you to some extent. Don't depend upon equipment to the point of inhibiting the development of your engineering basics and skills.
Cazzbar's guitar player analogy hits it right on the head, I believe.
NY, we're not that far apart, I don't think. The above quote is really at the core of what I'm trying to say.
You're right that having the larger tool kit can indeed be a positive learning experience,
if the student has the proper attitude about it.
My issue with the whole thing is that since coming to this board I have witnessed a pervasive basic belief amongst most (not all, but certainly a majority of) up-and-comers in this racket that the gear does the engineering. I truely believe this to be the absolute number one cause of the problems reported to these boards. All the work in the engineering chain is backloaded because the further down the workflow chain you go, the more sophisticated the gear.
The typical problem process typically goes something like this:
- Tracking is for old timers and documentarians. A mic and a preamp, how boring. Let's just get the tracks down and we'll just throw EQ and compressor and imaging plugs at the track during mixing; we'll find a combination of presets that'll be close enough for rock and roll. We'll let the plugs do our tracking during the mix when we really should be mixing instead. Because it's less work for us to let the plugs do it all.
- Then for "mixing", we'll just flatten the tracks with compression and stack them like layers in lasagna. The compressor is doing all the "mixing" we need. The only manual mixing we have to do is pan the guitars hard left and right and throw everything else more or less down the middle. My ears can handle panning at least. Piece of cake.
- We'll save all the rest of the mixing for the mastering stage where we'll try and fix the incomplete mix by throwing beaucoup multiband compressors, exciters and finalizers at it, force-molding the two mix instead of creating a creative and proper-sounding mix first. It's much easier to let the hardware/software do it at the end.
- Finally, we'll get on the internet and ask why our mix doesn't sound like the pros.
It's because they are leaning on the gear (hard or soft) to do the work for them. It just doesn't work that way.
Now if someone gets the gear with the intention of taking the time to learn the proper technique for using (and not using) it, then you're right; that's a completly different story and a very educational experience. But it's one we frankly just don't see very often around these parts.
I'd love to trip across a thread where someone posts an MP3 that sounds absolutely fantastic, like it was done at Paisley Park; really beautiful. With one exception. The drum kit is a bit loose sounding, and could really use a little track compression before being submixed. So the poster comes back and says, thanks guys, I guess I'm ready to start using my compressor now, eh?
G.