scorpio01169 said:
i agree that it's best that you go for the best production....however the end listener doesnt really care too much about how it was recorded or what format or the studio...they care about is the song something they can relate to, can they dance to it, or is he/she hot looking. look at the white strips....not the best production in the world by two of the worst musicians in the world....lol, but they made it big because of the look and the hype.
I disagree. Most people have come to be used to professionally recorded music. If you hand them something with too much bass, no high-end and poorly mixed instruments, they may very well not get past that to the music itself. Just the same with poorly done live music. I've seen acts before that sounded terrible live because they were in a poor venue, and their PA wasn't set up to fit the room well. Their CD on the other hand, was done professionally, and they had a good sound, which made me get to the songs themselves. At that point, I was able to tell if I really liked them or not.
Sure, a well-written song, decent musicianship and an interesting package make up a lot of an artist's popularity. But coupled with sub-standard recording? That will definitely detract from the number of people who listen.
The White Striped may have had very little instrumentation and aren't masters of their craft in terms of musicianship, but the recording itself was done well (or at least up to today's standards). The look and the hype definitely make up a lot of their existance as a popular group, but if their CDs were home produced, drums done by HammerHead percussion and guitar recorded with a 57 in front of a 20 watt Marshall combo, mixed mastered and printed in that dude's basement, chances are the recording wouldn't sound the way it does coming out of a "real" studio. And at that point, I doubt they'd get radio play, unless the poor quality of the recording actually
added to the sound, but that usually isn't the case.
The recording quality may not be everything, but it is a factor. And as chess said, she is recording vocals and acoustic guitar. You can make a very professional sounding acoustic album in an amateur room with some treatment for, what? A couple grand, including the instrument?
I think its great this artist was able to pull this off - it is definitely impressive, and a good case for those of us striving to get our material out to the masses. However, in the end, it is really a combination of the music and the recording - this artist had to know how to get a pretty damn good sound out of the space she was working in, with the equipment she had. THEN she had to add decent playing and a set of well-written songs (well, written for mass consumption, anyway) and a good persona to bundle it all together.