
Lt. Bob
Spread the Daf!
for me it can vary. But for the most part what I'm interested in is the final totallity of the piece. How I arrived at it doesn't matter much to me although I do understand being concerned with those aspects of it. Art, of any kind, is such a personal thing that the ways we appraoch it are all over the place.I tend to have recording anxiety. I can play a part perfectly during rehearsal, then when the red button is on I'll mess up the simplest thing! Used to I wanted to play through every part perfectly so that when I listened back my ego got masturbated knowing I flawlessy played my songs. I would get extremely discouraged and waste alot of time starting over everytime I messed up. It took the fun out of recording! I've since given myself an attitude adjustment. I realized that I'm trying to release something professional. That's alot to swallow. Now I sit at my computer and relax. I play through the whole song. If I mess up I just laugh at myself and continue playing instead of getting pissed. I then listen back and punch in over my errors. I'm happier knowing that I've then captured a perfect performace. Punching in is so easy to do well on DAW's. It's brought the fun back into recording. HOWEVER, I won't cheat and use little tricks to record something that I couldn't play if you asked me to. For example, slowing a song to half speed and playing the part an octave lower only to speed it up an appear to be a better guitar player than Jeff Loomis. Or getting a sample of my kick drum only to paste it on a grid to get that machine gun double bass part. If I couldn't make it through the part on my own, I'd drink another red bull and try again.
For me, I tend to get more excited by the cool things that happen unexpectedly ..... often mistakes and such can take you somewhere new that you'd never have come to on your own.
I love those moments most of all ........