if you had money to record an ep, which route would you guys take?
ps. i must admit, i did go a bit overboard on the limiter on some of the tracks. i'm still trying to get my head round the whole subject of limiting/compressing the mix.
By my reasoning, your P.S. pretty much answers your question.
I'm all for DIY myself, and I'm also perfer capturing a quality live performance over manufacturing a synthetic one in a digital laboratory. HOWEVER, there are two extra considerations that make that more than a black and white issue:
First, DIY is only worthwhile if one actually
knows how to do it themselves. DIY by someone who hasn't yet learned how to do it themselves well is going to sound like crap. IMHO, if you are still at the stage where you're trying to pancake your mixes and going overboard doing so, that's a rookie double-mistake. No offense intended in that statement; you're not the first, nor the last, to have that problem. But until you get that figured out, you really don't know how to DIY yet on anything but a hobbiest level.
Second, going into a studio does NOT have to mean assembling a laboratory studio production. Some of the best engineers and producers in the world (e.g. George Massenberg, Chuck Ainley, etc.) *much* prefer documenting a raw live performance in the studio than assembling a FrankenMix from multiple tracks and takes.
My vote would be for getting the best of both worlds; put yourself in the hands of a good engineer in a good studio, but pick an engineer (and producer) who understands and knows how to capture and mix the raw organic performance well.
Oh, and make sure you and your band practice the shit out of your material before you step into the studio. The double-edged sword dangling over the idea of organic tracking like that is that it's all up to the performance. If you guys suck, there's nothing the studio or engineer can do to help you. If you guys are in the zone, there's almost nothing the engineer
has to do to help you, you guys will
be the recording.
G.