homeuser said:
Quick question, when making a cd with 12-14 songs, do you think all of the songs should sound as if they came from the same collection of instruments or do you think it's ok to experiment and use different instruments/sound on each track? Thanks.
This is a great question and one that I've been thinking about for several months. I believe you're going to have to decide what you intend to do with your CD before you assemble it. If it's just for you and your friends, then have fun with variety. If you intend to try market it, however, you're probably better off sticking to one genre--or at least one genre per CD.
Record companies are just like other corporations. They trade on their brand names. And for a brand to have any meaning, the product MUST be predictable and consistent--painfully consistent. A McDonald's hamburger, for instance, must taste the same whether you eat it in Baltimore or Guatemala City. (And, oddly enough, they do.)
So if you want a record company to take an interest in your CD, you should make it very easy for the execs to be able to immediately identify its genre, know to which audience they will market it, and decide which category it will occupy on the rack at the CD store. Those things are much more important to the company than the aesthetic quality of the music.
Yes, there are exceptions. There are some very creative bands out there. But usually they get their start as genre bands, build a reliable audience, and then start to expand their repertoire after that. SJJohnston (above) mentioned Sgt. Pepper as a good example. Look how much predictable upbeat pop the Beatles put out before taking a chance on sitars, sound effects, and (gasp!) a thematic concept. And that was back in the '60s. It's even harder to break the corporate stranglehold today.
I guess if I were you (and I am in a very similar situation), I'd record all the songs, assemble them on a CD the way I like them, but keep them stored separately, too, just in case your stuff catches the interest of a record company. Then you can easily re-assemble a CD with tunes of all one genre if that's the requirement of getting the deal.