dkerwood said:
I'm just trying to produce a product that won't perhaps be an "album", but something that I can distribute without feeling embarassed.
Well now you are starting to understand how serious the issue is. I was told here that it wasn't, but if I believed to what other people had to say all the time, then I wouldn't need to think for myself.
In the moment, it might not seem important, but when you aren't able to land those gigs cause you lost work to bands with better material, then it will sink in.
So I think as of right now, that's your biggest concern. How are you going to tie the studio recorded material with the live? If there is no good recorded material, there won't be any live.
The demo is just the demo, studio and live are two serperate focuses. You need to approach each with two different frames of thinking.
And you see, you're not the only who worries about these things. If the engineer is the type to over-fix your performances, then you are in for a ride my friend.
I rarely hear edited performances that don't sound humanly altered. Alot of them comming from guys with 40 times my experience. And it's never in the moment that you notice it. It's always after the thing is done and ready to show.
So I'm almost seeing that you have two options:
a) you either have your bandmates record as best they can, and then cross your fingers if the engineer decides to edit the shit out of the material to make it *somewhat* appealing
or
b) you decide to record the parts the way you hear it in your head, hoping it will come out exactly as you plan it, with little or no editing afterwards.
So you really have to be a producer and decide what outcome you're willing to play with.
If I was you and I knew I could get the parts better myself, then I would do it. Then later on, when my band is more comfortable with recording and I can find someone who can capture that, then I have them come in and do it.
On the surface, you're still selling your band. That's if what you play live somewhat resembles what you do on CD.
If you turn in something that's super edited and you can't pull it off live, then you over produced and you just shot yourself in the foot.