Robert D said:
I don't get some of you on this. There was full disclosure, the client wanted to proceed anyway, the AE seems reasonably happy, the client is happy......... what's the problem?
Agreed. Baker advised them of the problems with their recording space in advance, under promised on what the results would be, and obviously still managed to make a recording the client is happy with. I don't see any reason why he should give them their money back or re-record anything. If he had not advised them of the problems in advance or made a recording they were unhappy with, then that would be a different story. But that's not what happened.
In the future one hopes the band would be willing to consider his opinion on recording in a better space. And now that he seems to be gaining the trust of the band, it may be easier for Baker to indeed steer them toward a better sounding room.
In my opinion, some of the best jobs to take are the no-win jobs where you are set up for failure. In some circumstances, anyway.
I recently was hired as a sub keyboardist on a national tour that was coming through town. Normally the keyboard 2 player would have played the keys 1 book on some nights, but took a look at the book and refused due to the difficulty level and how much time it would take to learn. Another keyboardist had also refused to play the keys 1 book when the show came through town earlier in the year. Yet another had even quit the job over it. The book is virtually impossible to sub on, and is a real setup for very public failure, which everyone knew.
I worked my butt off on that book, even setting up a mock keyboard rig in my home to simulate the conditions I would face in the orchestra pit. Fortunately I nailed it, and a month later I was called to play keys on the next national tour coming through that theater as the regular, not the sub.
So in "no win" situations you can sometimes turn it around and come out ahead, as Baker seems to have done. The band knew the space wasn't good, yet Baker made a recording they were happy with. This says good things about his abilities, and they might give his opinion more consideration next time around. If their checks don't bounce, then it's a win-win for everyone.
It's all an ongoing process. You do indeed have to determine whether their is any chance of success, as some situations can indeed be truly no-win because too many circumstances are stacked against one.