junplugged said:
Q. can any decent recording be done in a room that's a rectangle, jammed full of stuff, low celing, and is by chance, tuned to somewhere around A-flat?
If you can, find a different room to record in. If that's not possible, close mic with a more directional microphone like a cardioid. (It really depends on what you're recording).
Do you have a closet in that room? Pack it full of stuff, clothes, everything you can. Put the mic right inside of that stuff so just the tip is pointing out far enough for you to record into. Take the doors off your closet if you can.
Buy/make some 4" absorber panels and deaden about 80% of the closet with it. Lay plywood on the floor over the carpet if you have any (assuming you're miking an acoustic instrument).
If recording an amp, point it facing the stuffed closet at the mic.
junplugged said:
Q. can close mic'ing on everything solve room problems?
With an omni mic, not completely. Actually, never 'compeletly' but close. I've been stuck in a situation that left me with a cheap (Behringer) omni SDC mic, in a small, boxy room, with no treatment, recording a (beautiful sounding) acoustic guitar. I close miked it from literally about 4" away from the neckjoint. The results were not as good as I liked, but it was a great sounding guitar played by a great musician. The room was not very noticeable in the recording except in the higher frequencies. Applying a nice, natural studio reverb to the end result made me happier, and the artist much happier (find a good reverb!).
junplugged said:
Q. Motown's original studio was in a home, but the snake pit was larger and had treatment, does that mean it was no longer a 'home' studio? and didn't they use a lot of the same kind of mic's?
I don't have a lot of direct knowledge on this. A treated room doesn't necessarily = a pro studio. I would say, a pro studio is one that has actual "pro's" working behind the desk, and that make a living off what they do.
junplugged said:
Q. aren't there 2 kinds of mastering? one focusing on an individual song's sound, and the other considering the entire group of songs, as headed for a CD?
Are you releasing a single or a full album? Mastering is preparing something for duplication. At least that's what one definition is. It seems to have gained a new definition awhile back.
I will first say I am NOT a mastering engineer. I do have a mastering service but I tell my clients up-front there are better (and more expensive) people for the job.
Mastering an album is usually about getting all songs to sound good on the same CD, and choosing the order that they go in. Controlling fade-ins/fade-outs between tracks, overall volume, EQ, etc. Making the album sound cohesive and 'as a whole'.
junplugged said:
Q. all of this talk of 'quality' does it still matter as much as it once did considering people are compressing the file down to mp3 and listening in cars and ear buds?
That's subjective. To me, it does (especially on acoustic music). I've had recordings that when converted down to even 64KBPS sounded better than most other internet MP3s at 128. Most of the shittyness is due to high frequency reflections in rooms among other things. Some pro recordings can be converted down real far and still keep their good sound.
junplugged said:
Q. how can i sit in and listen and learn on a pro session? i'm sure there's a lot more attention to detail and a lot more time spent on the project than I take, although, i did spend possibly too much time on one of my recordings only to find later, that i spent all the time on the instrumental recording and mixing and my vocal track was just not good enough b/c i didn't comp it or really develop the performance and I kind of screwed the final result b/c of that. (it's on my myspace page)
I will take a listen when I get a chance. There are some videos on
www.youtube.com of in-studio sessions, but usually not that helpful. And they usually leave out all of the over-dubs, and the actual planning that takes place on big budget recordings.
It's very important to
take your time and
don't be lazy on your recordings. If you would have spent the same amount of time on the vocals as you did the instrumental, would it have not come out a lot better?