Well, Chessrock, I set out to build this studio to track an album, not to mix it, and not to master it, just track it. And that is what I have done. I've now got the raw tracks in Pro Tools, and we're downloading it to Littledog tomorrow. If you want to hear some of the raw tracks, here's the link-
www.nowhereradio.com/artists/?aid=3239/album680
Look, Ma, no panning- mono. No EQ, no compression, no reverb- naked. Even those house mixes are dated now, there's been quite a bit of re-tracking and re-mixing since they were put up. I can't wait to hear what some of this sounds like after it's been well processed. Woo Hoo. But even at my neophyte level, there's some commercial work I can do. We're tracking a Classical solo guitar album by jazz master Christopher Woitach in the spring. One X-Y pair, panned hard left and hard right. No compression, no reverb- naked. Should be right up my alley. We're also doing an English translation of a Hellenic text for the NEA, with lyre interludes between the chapters.
The main thing is- I haven't put up a sign that says this is a commercial studio, but I am beginning to do some limited commercial work that is within my capabilities, which is OK. My God, on New Years Eve, I get to record an 88 piece orchestra at Mechanics hall, a $200 million+ hall built to record classical music. I am so psyched! But I am doing that for free, because the conductor asked me. I actually turned down money, because I refuse to claim to be able to do something I'm not sure I can do. If they like the finished recording, I'll be happy to sell it to them.
I actually think of classical music as easy to deal with, because the nature of my work for the last 2 years has been all about mics and mic placement, recording an unprocessed signal. Classical people love that.-Richie