
antispatula
Active member
when I record. I haven't done any serious recordings for nearly 10 months, so perhaps I'm just not used to it?? I do plenty of demos in my room, and those are super fun. But when I try doing a serious recording, I get nervous and mess up no matter what.
I think I've discovered why and what to do though.
It's ALWAYS the base instrument that messes me up, as in the first one I lay down. It's either guitar or piano. Piano is the hardest to put down first, I think because I'm not playing to anything. Does that make sense?
BUT. I've discovered I don't mess up at all if I sing along with the piano part. I don't want to record vox and piano at the same time, but when I do I get "into it," stress melts and I get a great piano recording.
Would it make sense to record a rough piano and vocals base track, then layer everything else on, then go back to the piano at the end, to record it better? I think if I could play along with the whole song when doing the piano part I'd be able to do it no problem. Does that sound like a smart idea?
I think I've discovered why and what to do though.
It's ALWAYS the base instrument that messes me up, as in the first one I lay down. It's either guitar or piano. Piano is the hardest to put down first, I think because I'm not playing to anything. Does that make sense?
BUT. I've discovered I don't mess up at all if I sing along with the piano part. I don't want to record vox and piano at the same time, but when I do I get "into it," stress melts and I get a great piano recording.
Would it make sense to record a rough piano and vocals base track, then layer everything else on, then go back to the piano at the end, to record it better? I think if I could play along with the whole song when doing the piano part I'd be able to do it no problem. Does that sound like a smart idea?