I
IanW-UK
New member
I love the way you track acoustic geetars, very intimate and smooth sounding. What's your recording chain for that? Cool tune, very polished sounding.
Cheers,
Ian........
Cheers,
Ian........
SLuiCe said:Some place where the focus is on the creation or the expression, not on why the snare sample sound bad, or whether the bass really needs to come down that extra .3 dB's.
SLuiCe said:But the next day as I pulled myself together and listened to what I had recorded, I realized how much damage our brains often do to our music. Tom
SLuiCe said:That's true, Chris. In fact, for some reason you omitted the previous sentence in your quote. I also did say "often".
The whole point of my post was to express my own presonal rediscovery of the initial impulse of music, not the resulting effect of it. Am I going to stop applying my mixing experience to my work? No. But I am going to spend more time making the music itself than I do tweaking it to satisfy the audiophiles.

I'll focus on the songwriting aspect, which I find is more important. Too many of us think "If only I had ONE more mic, my songs would sound good", "All I need is that preamp to make it sound better". As far as I see it, once a decent setup is created, its up to the creativeness of the composer to make something of it. Now before this turns into a flame, I admit I've fallen into the technical trap. I'm very much wanting new equipment (but then again I do only have the mic which is built into my monitor and have a soundcard that came with the computer, so I atleast need SOMETHING
). Anyway, I'll stop, but if you do "transfer" to a song-writing style forum, drop a link for us? (Or not if you don't want me involved
)
). The thing is to have a good setup, and enjoy the music from thereon. You indeed are a good rolemodel for those coming here thinking that you need to spend tens of thousands to get professional quality, but I wonder how far a bad song would sound good on your equipment? Do you think your songwriting bypasses the problems? I can't really say, except I know it's exceptional.SLuiCe said:But I think we get on these forums and get sucked into, as Dobro put it in another thread, "elitist bullshit."
SLuiCe said:I suppose it depends on who you ask. Some react to the music, some react to the sonics. I simply recommend we think for ourselves here. Gather opinions from several different people when making critical musical and technical decisions. There are plenty of people who frequent this board who talk lots but never back up their words with music. They're better suited for working in a music store IMHO. They'll tell you all about algorithms and linear phase and standing waves and everything else they read about in the mixing/mastering forum. But have you heard their music. If you have, did it move you? That's what I'm talking about. Just don't rush into things. Temper others' thoughts with plenty of your own. Cheers.
SLuiCe said:There are plenty of people who frequent this board who talk lots but never back up their words with music. They're better suited for working in a music store IMHO.