I
Ironklad Audio
New member
one thing about click tracks for starters: it's absolutely impossible to record certain types of music to a click. there's a lot of stuff out there that just has way too many stops/starts/breaks and TEMPO CHANGES for a click to be effective. listen to a dillinger escape plan album, and tell me if you think those guys used a click track when recording. also, do you think most rock bands practice and write to a click track? get real.
2nd, like people here were saying, it's often common practice to record the drums, then overdub the rest of it over the top. the 1st time i entered a studio to record an album for a band i was playing guitar in(and bass on the recordings), we recorded drums along with a guitar scratch track, then guitars, then bass/vox. then i took some college recording classes after that, and guess what? if there was a project where it wasn't feasible to record everyone at once(which you usually could, since the school has a large, tuned studio, along with a drum room and iso room), we would put down the drums and maybe guitars or bass, then overdub the rest of it
in my own studio, the procedure(for rock bands) is the same...i have a single small room for tracking, along with a bedroom that's been converted to my control room, so the process usually goes like so: the drummer sets up in the room, i mic him up, set levels, etc....then i run a DI signal of the guitar(s)/bass into my DAW, load some generic preset in amplitube, then when everyone's ready, i hit record. sometimes i keep the DI'd bass track in there if it was a good performance and the band likes the way it sounds - if not, we do a few more takes of the DI or mic up a cab if that's what they prefer. then i set up and mic the amps, and overdub the guitars. then vocals.
in all honesty, i don't know why you would do things any other way, unless you have enough space to mic everyone at once or you're doing something with a very simple feel/timing/whatever. the only time i could see myself using a click while recording is if i have someone doing a simple song that has the same tempo all the way through, which seems to be pretty rare nowadays.
2nd, like people here were saying, it's often common practice to record the drums, then overdub the rest of it over the top. the 1st time i entered a studio to record an album for a band i was playing guitar in(and bass on the recordings), we recorded drums along with a guitar scratch track, then guitars, then bass/vox. then i took some college recording classes after that, and guess what? if there was a project where it wasn't feasible to record everyone at once(which you usually could, since the school has a large, tuned studio, along with a drum room and iso room), we would put down the drums and maybe guitars or bass, then overdub the rest of it
in my own studio, the procedure(for rock bands) is the same...i have a single small room for tracking, along with a bedroom that's been converted to my control room, so the process usually goes like so: the drummer sets up in the room, i mic him up, set levels, etc....then i run a DI signal of the guitar(s)/bass into my DAW, load some generic preset in amplitube, then when everyone's ready, i hit record. sometimes i keep the DI'd bass track in there if it was a good performance and the band likes the way it sounds - if not, we do a few more takes of the DI or mic up a cab if that's what they prefer. then i set up and mic the amps, and overdub the guitars. then vocals.
in all honesty, i don't know why you would do things any other way, unless you have enough space to mic everyone at once or you're doing something with a very simple feel/timing/whatever. the only time i could see myself using a click while recording is if i have someone doing a simple song that has the same tempo all the way through, which seems to be pretty rare nowadays.