
BRIEFCASEMANX
Winner chicken dinner!
because it wasn't recorded in a multi-million dollar studio doesn't mean that that mix can't sound more open, and better than it does right now.
chessrock said:I think a lot of us on this board are very guilty of focusing so much on the recording aspect ... i.e. you've got Sonic Albert touting his "2 channels of world class" and similar obsessions over the studio and the gear, etc.
SonicAlbert said:I don't feel the "two channels of world class recording" is an obsession, but a reasonable and somewhat affordable way to seriously upgrade the quality of the recordings that can be done in a home studio. Taking this approach can make a huge difference.
chessrock said:It's just that this thread had gotten close to 20 replies, and nowhere did anyone mention the gear being played by the musician. It's not just you who's guilty of obsessing on the recording gear. It's me and everyone else.
If I really wanted to get a professional sound, and I had a choice between working with high end mics, pres, etc. or the high end instruments ... I'll take the $10,000 drum kit and the boutique amps, etc. any day. Give me that mega bucks drum kit with the $1K crash cymbals, a pair of Oktavas, a Mackie board and a Delta 1010 ... and I'll cut us some really nice sounding drum tracks.
Give me the average drum kit along with some Schoeps mics and custom-racked API's, and I might not be as happy.
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mindwave_21 said:Ok, I did a few searches on this board and couldn't find what I was looking for.
I have a problem with the boxiness/"sounds like it was recorded at home" of my recent recordings. I thought if I panned the tracks and adjusted levels, I could get the sound that I was looking for.
Here's a recording of a song my band recently did:
Wave Array Music Page
I guess I should say that what I'm A/B'ing this against is Coldplay's "Don't Panic". I realize the songs have different vibes, but I'm just referring to the openness/3D sound of the overall recording. For some reason, when the intro for Don't Panic comes in, I feel surrounded by the sound that's put out. It's behind, above, and around me on a 3D landscape. When I listen to my band's recording, I feel like it's either in front of me, or only 2D (L/R and Forward/Rear as opposed to 3D).
My question is, where do I go from here?
What's the biggest factor of many that causes my problem?
Do I work on the panning and levels again?
Do I need better/different track recordings? Mic placement etc.?
I strongly feel that I'm limited by my abilities and not my equipment, but should I be thinking that (i.e., is gear a limitation)?
Any suggestions or similiar experiences (with a possible solution) would be helpful.
Thanks!
Eq. used:
Mac Laptop with Garageband
Firepod
SM57
Oktava MK319
Other misc. mics (I think a Shure Highball, Audix OM-3, Audix Fusion 6 drum mic kit, and a few other Shures)
BOSS GT3 (some guitar tracks direct)
RedStone said:having good condenser mics, a good front end and recording to 0dBVU will help get you towards that 3-D space you want in your recordings
R
RedStone said:recording to 0dBVU will help get you towards that 3-D space you want in your recordings ...
RedStone said:people with zillion dollar digital gear can (in some sense) beat the audiophilic crap out of their stuff and it will still sound pretty good to most people's ears ... but people with the kind of gear you get at joe blow's home studio need to beware of the myth that recording hot is better. It's not. the closer you record to 0, the more life you will be taking from your recordings.
R