S
swarfrat
New member
Bob Dylan sure comes across with "authenticity" on "Everybody must get stoned". That's more what I would associate with it.
There is no profit.
I think what Greg means is that until you recoup your investment of time, money & effort....you're not really making a profit....and few small studios do.
Having spent a bunch of time with people who abuse aderall and other prescription meds, those guys are really annoying.
I suppose if you're recording professionally, it's a matter of either establishing rules for your studio or charging them more (depending on if they're paying per-project or per hour).
If you're recording for a friend, just talk to them about it I suppose. ("Dude, if you show up to my studio high again, I'm just gonna cancel the session and send you home.")
No profits here. Only expenses. And a lot of fun!So do a lot of you guys run studios for profit? Out of your home?
I don't care about a person's internal chemistry, it's their behavior that matters. There are enough clean and sober wack jobs and functional addicts out there that you can't judge by whether someone is "high" or not.
I'll jump in here.
It really depends on the level of what anyone feels comfortable with. Put a casual drinker on stage or studio without their comfort level of medication, and prepare for less than acceptable performance. If they are beyond their limits, then it goes to shit.
That's only true to a point. A little bit of moderate drinking in performance or recording is no big deal. I routinely share a beer or three, or a little bit of whiskey with people I have into my studio if it makes them comfortable. Sometimes it actually helps to make them feel more at ease (when it's a moderate amount). It's when you're talking about drugs (heroin, meth, coke, PCP, Bath Salts, Krokodil, Huffing paint or feces (kinda kidding with the last few) that it gets out of control. I also realize that some people perform better with a little bit of weed in their system. If that's their style and they retain work ethic I've got no problem with it. You don't have to ban any fun at all, even if you bar drugs from your studio. Again, people who are totally gone on chemicals tend to believe they are performing a lot better than they really are. If someone were hopped up on something the OP was talking about while we were supposed to be working, I would respectfully ask them to leave.Whatever a performer is comfortable with is what you should give them. Taking someone out of there comfort zone is seemingly unproductive. At least in my experience..
Having had an accidental overdose of caffeine + epinephrin as a youngster (self medicating a bad asthma attack).... I remember laying there with my heart racing thinking... "People do this to themselves for FUN?!?!?" I get why people might use euphoria inducing drugs recreationally. I can get people using stimulants for some other purpose (cramming for finals). But that didn't fit any definition of "fun" that I know of.
I hate recording musicians on drugs or alcohol. They all suck. Potheads suck, junkies suck, drunks suck. And don't give me that "it relaxes me" garbage. Being fucked up does not make anyone better at anything. If you can't get your shit together enough to at least record sober, then you have problems.