N
Nameless
New member
Hello. I've been working professionally in my studio for about 30 years now. A kid I have working/learning with me at my studio came to me with a lot of misinformation. He also told me about this website.
I wasn't going to sign up here until I read through all of the misinformation. Let me start by saying there is a lot of good advice here, but there's just as much bad advice and people speaking opinions of the majority instead of facts and experience (which is what bothers me). For example, 90% of the people think <name of preamp here> is a great, budget pre. And maybe only 5 or 10% of the people have actually used it.
I'm sure a lot of you will disagree and probably get angry with this post, which is fine. But for the rest of you who want to put that aside may actually learn something and improve your recordings.
There are some basic facts to getting that 'pro' sound. You'd be surprised at how many 'pro' studios aren't even capable of getting a truly professional sound out of their studios when they have all the necessary gear.
So, without further a due, here are the facts. A lot of these you will probably know, but some you may not.
1. You will not get a pro sound recording amateur/decent musicians playing on amateur/decent instruments. The expensive studios get a 'pro' sound because only the pro musicians can afford it.
2. Gear is not nearly as important as you think
3. Room treatment matters more than any gear you could ever buy. This, along with the musicians/instruments is what really sets apart a pro recording from a home recording.
4. Don't bother 'upgrading' preamps from entry level if you don't have at least a $500 budget. And that will only get you to the next level of "entry-level". You need to dump at least a grand on a good, solid preamp that is capable of yielding professional results (remember #2 and #3 though).
5. Digital plugins suck. Most people can't hear the difference, but when working in a studio for 30+ years it is blatantly obvious, to me anyway. Spend the money on (good) outboard processors. Even the UAD plugins don't compare well to quality outboard gear.
6. Mix in mono. (Seriously). Don't start panning until volume levels are set and EQ and other adjustments have been made.
7. Retrack, retrack, and retrack again. You wouldn't beileve how many overdubs are done in studios. Slight string buzz on one of the acoustic guitar tracks? Redo it. Or punch in if you have to. Slightly too much bass? Retrack with better mic placement. Listen (in mono) to the mix while recording your tracks and move the mic around until it's just right.
8. Monitors don't matter as much as you might think. Yup, just find a pair that provide enough detail and are reasonably flat. By flat, I don't mean ruler flat, either. Just buy a decent pair and be done with it. Use your ears and listen on a bunch of other systems to judge things. Oh, and treat your room.
9. Do people actually spend a grand or more on A/D converters?
Wow. Congratulations. You just fell for a huge marketing ploy. I'm not saying converters don't matter, they do. But if you keep your signal chain as short as possible and don't run your tracks through more than 1 A/D conversion, even the converters on most entry level interfaces are good enough. Spend your money elsewhere.
10. "Your signal chain is only as good as the weakest link". FALSE! I hate hearing that, especially from people who are just saying it because it is apparently the 'norm' around here. If you don't know what you're talking about, please sit down and don't spread misinformation.
If you run a $10,000 mic through a $10,000 pre, to a $100 interface that is using $10 converters, it will still sound much better than if all of that gear were entry level. Much MUCH better. Granted, if you replace that interface with a $10,000 one, the quality will be better. But I doubt most of you (and even most recording engineers in other studios) would hear a significant difference! Yup, it's true! Just keep your signal chain short and don't run tracks through more than 1 A/D conversion.
11. Careful who you take advice from around here. I've noticed quite a few people while briefly browsing that seemed to know what they're talking about, but even more people who just say things because everyone else says them.
12. "This track/mic/preamp doesn't take EQ well" - Really? ...You sure? Because I think you're full of crap. EQ is EQ. If it doesn't sound good after EQing, you either a) don't know what you're doing, b) you're EQ sounds like shit, or c) the track sounded like shit to begin with but you didn't notice until you EQd it. This brings me back to #5.
13. "I can't get a good sound out of my amp no matter what I do" - You know why? Because your amp sucks. Or maybe you suck. Not sure. Either way, don't record it. Go ahead and mess with EQ and other settings on the amp, maybe you'll get lucky. Otherwise, throw it out. Don't record something if it sounds bad (why would you even want to?).
14. "If it's analog/tube, it's gotta be good!" I've heard just as many tube amps and tube gear that sounded worse than even some not-so-good digital gear and amps! Nothing is better than a good piece of analog gear in my opinion, but just because it's analog doesn't make it good!
15. You're not ready to master yourself - FALSE. If you can mix your own songs you can master them. That's usually the problem though. Most people CAN'T mix their own songs well enough to get a good result that's even worth mastering.
16. STOP RUSHING TO THE NEXT STEP! - People are always thinking to themselves "That doesn't sound that good, I'll fix it later." If it's during the tracking stage, they say they'll fix it in the mix. If it's in the mix, they say they'll fix it in the mastering stage. This is the reason you are not getting a sound you're happy with.
I'll post more as I think of them. Most of these some of you (maybe the majority of you) already know.
Also if anyone has questions I'll be glad to answer. I'm usually very busy but this week I'm taking a little vacation and I wouldn't mind giving advice/answers to some of you.
I wasn't going to sign up here until I read through all of the misinformation. Let me start by saying there is a lot of good advice here, but there's just as much bad advice and people speaking opinions of the majority instead of facts and experience (which is what bothers me). For example, 90% of the people think <name of preamp here> is a great, budget pre. And maybe only 5 or 10% of the people have actually used it.
I'm sure a lot of you will disagree and probably get angry with this post, which is fine. But for the rest of you who want to put that aside may actually learn something and improve your recordings.
There are some basic facts to getting that 'pro' sound. You'd be surprised at how many 'pro' studios aren't even capable of getting a truly professional sound out of their studios when they have all the necessary gear.
So, without further a due, here are the facts. A lot of these you will probably know, but some you may not.
1. You will not get a pro sound recording amateur/decent musicians playing on amateur/decent instruments. The expensive studios get a 'pro' sound because only the pro musicians can afford it.

2. Gear is not nearly as important as you think
3. Room treatment matters more than any gear you could ever buy. This, along with the musicians/instruments is what really sets apart a pro recording from a home recording.
4. Don't bother 'upgrading' preamps from entry level if you don't have at least a $500 budget. And that will only get you to the next level of "entry-level". You need to dump at least a grand on a good, solid preamp that is capable of yielding professional results (remember #2 and #3 though).
5. Digital plugins suck. Most people can't hear the difference, but when working in a studio for 30+ years it is blatantly obvious, to me anyway. Spend the money on (good) outboard processors. Even the UAD plugins don't compare well to quality outboard gear.
6. Mix in mono. (Seriously). Don't start panning until volume levels are set and EQ and other adjustments have been made.
7. Retrack, retrack, and retrack again. You wouldn't beileve how many overdubs are done in studios. Slight string buzz on one of the acoustic guitar tracks? Redo it. Or punch in if you have to. Slightly too much bass? Retrack with better mic placement. Listen (in mono) to the mix while recording your tracks and move the mic around until it's just right.
8. Monitors don't matter as much as you might think. Yup, just find a pair that provide enough detail and are reasonably flat. By flat, I don't mean ruler flat, either. Just buy a decent pair and be done with it. Use your ears and listen on a bunch of other systems to judge things. Oh, and treat your room.
9. Do people actually spend a grand or more on A/D converters?

10. "Your signal chain is only as good as the weakest link". FALSE! I hate hearing that, especially from people who are just saying it because it is apparently the 'norm' around here. If you don't know what you're talking about, please sit down and don't spread misinformation.
If you run a $10,000 mic through a $10,000 pre, to a $100 interface that is using $10 converters, it will still sound much better than if all of that gear were entry level. Much MUCH better. Granted, if you replace that interface with a $10,000 one, the quality will be better. But I doubt most of you (and even most recording engineers in other studios) would hear a significant difference! Yup, it's true! Just keep your signal chain short and don't run tracks through more than 1 A/D conversion.
11. Careful who you take advice from around here. I've noticed quite a few people while briefly browsing that seemed to know what they're talking about, but even more people who just say things because everyone else says them.

12. "This track/mic/preamp doesn't take EQ well" - Really? ...You sure? Because I think you're full of crap. EQ is EQ. If it doesn't sound good after EQing, you either a) don't know what you're doing, b) you're EQ sounds like shit, or c) the track sounded like shit to begin with but you didn't notice until you EQd it. This brings me back to #5.
13. "I can't get a good sound out of my amp no matter what I do" - You know why? Because your amp sucks. Or maybe you suck. Not sure. Either way, don't record it. Go ahead and mess with EQ and other settings on the amp, maybe you'll get lucky. Otherwise, throw it out. Don't record something if it sounds bad (why would you even want to?).
14. "If it's analog/tube, it's gotta be good!" I've heard just as many tube amps and tube gear that sounded worse than even some not-so-good digital gear and amps! Nothing is better than a good piece of analog gear in my opinion, but just because it's analog doesn't make it good!
15. You're not ready to master yourself - FALSE. If you can mix your own songs you can master them. That's usually the problem though. Most people CAN'T mix their own songs well enough to get a good result that's even worth mastering.
16. STOP RUSHING TO THE NEXT STEP! - People are always thinking to themselves "That doesn't sound that good, I'll fix it later." If it's during the tracking stage, they say they'll fix it in the mix. If it's in the mix, they say they'll fix it in the mastering stage. This is the reason you are not getting a sound you're happy with.
I'll post more as I think of them. Most of these some of you (maybe the majority of you) already know.
Also if anyone has questions I'll be glad to answer. I'm usually very busy but this week I'm taking a little vacation and I wouldn't mind giving advice/answers to some of you.