T
tdukex
Man of the Muse
This is a pointless, pretentious, post-padder thread.
Say that three times real fast, and be done with it.
Say that three times real fast, and be done with it.
cavedog101 said:
and littledog, dont you think if the beatles had wanted to play i am the walrus live there would have been the london philharmonic and twenty other musicians on the stage for that?!!they never had to scrimp on anything.....
djc said:It's all irrelevant anyway. How many of you think you even have a snowball's chance in hell of making it big?

. . . appresheates somebody for at least trying and giving it there all. ( where all just a bunch of perverted computer geeks, but we all can make some damn fine sounding music )
Beezoboy said:Originally posted by Zeke Sayer
Hooked on phonics worked for Zeke.I do agree with you though buddy.
Beezoboy

pipelineaudio said:Home studios are great in that they can allow an artist to develop their songs without worrying about money and a ticking clock. People with home studios that end up recording at a bigger studio usually end up with a MUCH better album than those who never heard themselves on tape before
they can be REALLY bad for all concerned ( including the whole field of home recording) when they put real studios out of business thru dishonest tactics.
Most of the techniques and skills you read about and learn for your home studios were invented in big studios. The technology is also very much " trickle down"
The bad chain of events is when a guy with a mackie and an adat and zero skill can charge a VERY low rate and get business that should have gone to another place...eventually the band realizes the crap situation but no longer has the money to go to a real place. You can say " well the crap place will go out of business", but that means nothing....now the crap place can sell their crap gear to an even crappier place for CHEAPER
viscious circle
I DO try and set up the smarter of my clients with their own home studios as much as I can. It actually creates a LOT more business for me in the long run.
it just set me off and got me on a roll again. 
I thinks its hard to distinguish professional from hobbiest when all we do is look at equipment lists. A pultec in the wrong hands is far more harmful than a Alesis 3630 in the right hands. Ive actually toured multi-million dollar facilites and interviewed engineers to see what they have to offer. Set up an appointment and ask to have some of the engineers material listened to, ask about equipment in the studio and how it works. If you test drive a $200 pair of monitors, why wouldn't you test drive a $1000 per day facility? Have the engineer come see you live shows or come to your home studio to help him understand what your goals are, he or she will have a better grasp on you and your music. Most of all, when dealing with large pro facilities, you must be serious and show some integrity. Keep your commitments. I have a vocalist coming in tomorrow that Ive spent 4 weeks with in various conversations educating him on the process and equipment, comforting him and his producer. He has been to several other bigger facilities but I gave him a demo disc of my work, metal to acapella and he wants me to engineer at my modest lil garage. Im not stealing business, Im earning it. Just like everyone else should. Ive worked in bigger studio's and seen clients walk away unhappy because of an engineers inability to please the client. Pro aint the size of the equipment list dudes, its the quality of the product.mbuster said:You know, the one thing I like best about my home recordings, is that they're mine. I am fully aware of my limitations, and the limitations of my gear. I would love to record my songs with a TRUE pro, just to hear what it could sound like in the hands of a master. But the fact is, I've got no money, definitely no label, hell I don't even have a band. Even if I did, I'm not sure I'd feel as personally involved with my songs. They wouldn't be as "mine" .The only thing I do have is the fact that, good or bad, Everything I record is ME. Everything I hear is ME. It's mine, all mine and if nobody ever hears anything I record, I'm still doing it because I love it. There's a lot more members on this BBS than are posting in this thread, and I'd be willing to bet a LOT of them feel the same way. So do most of us care what a real engineer thinks of us? Not so sure.
