
Eurythmic
majordomo plasticomo
I'm not sure which forum would be more appropriate for these questions, but this one seems best...
Here's the deal. Like so many of you, I play in a band. It's a very classicist style of rock. We claim groups like the Beatles, the Who, and Counting Crows as our influences. Thing is, I have trouble thinking of this venture as anything but something to do for a lot of fun. I left college to pursue music, and I would be willing to do anything to be able to call myself a professional musician without a day job. The other guys in the band are not like this. They would never take a risk like leaving school; and who could blame them? Of course, you can say that there's always the chance of just being "discovered", but nothing in my life has ever just fallen into my lap. Why should I expect this to? Furthermore, I sometimes have trouble with the material. I LOVE rock and roll. I'd love to be Pete Townshend. But I'm not. What on earth can I do for rock music that hasn't already been done? I'll never write the next "Yesterday" and make you want to cry. I'll never write the next "Won't Get Fooled Again" and make you want to pump your fists and break things.
My feeling is, if I want to have any chance in music, I need to try to do something that hasn't been done before, or at least expand something that hasn't been fully explored yet - which I sometimes think that rock music HAS been.
And when I try to explain to the guys what I think we COULD do, they're not interested. They just want to rock.
Thus, I've been writing and recording most of my songs by myself. I consider the music to be "pop", but hopefully... uh, the "real" kind? I'm still trying to figure out what exactly my "vision" is, but I imagine something like... I dunno, the slickness of current synth-based teen-pop, the melodies of Duran Duran, the conviction of the Smiths, the truth of Pete Townshend... I dunno. Makes me sound awfully pretentious, doesn't it? I feel, in general, that the New Wave and New Romantic genres, minus the crazy fashion trends, were never fully fleshed out... and maybe a little of that would be a breath of fresh air for the charts. But whatever.
I'm just confused as to where I can begin. I'm looking for whatever random advice that I can get... I'm starting, of course, by writing the songs. I don't know if it's realistic, but my goal is to have an album's worth of songs that I believe in, in a couple of months or so. So, I spend as much time at home recording as I can, fleshing out arrangements, getting better at singing my songs, solidifying my ideas, etc. I already have one song that's just about ready to go, and a few others that are getting there. But then I hit the first stumbling block. There are a lot of difficulties here, but what I want is a professional sound - something I can't get on my own. Basically, the first goal on my list is to have one album to my name, that I can actually release to my friends or the general public, without disclaimers. Maybe that'll leave me with 900 copies of something that I can't move, but if I'm going to do this, I want to do it right. Because I can't move on to a "real" career without regrets unless I know for sure that I didn't suceed as a musician because I wasn't good enough - not because I didn't work hard enough.
Now, some difficulties. What can I expect from going to a pro studio? Here's an example, a studio that I found here in Lansing:
http://www.lighthouserecording.com/
Now, I don't plan to go in there until I have a DAMN good idea of what I want to do. But I've never been produced by anyone but myself before. In general, when you pay that $95 an hour, what can you expect to get? Do you get a producer, or an engineer? Take Beck, for example. He's amazing, but a lot of what you hear on _Midnite Vultures_ is the work of the producer. Beck didn't sit at his computer for hours to create those amazing backing tracks. Of course, I'm not expecting to just run into somebody who's going to turn out to be the next (big name producer here). Is this something I can expect input or help with, though? A lot of my stuff is synthesizer-heavy, with guitars and stuff used for color and maybe the occasional solo. And I can get some pleasing results with soundfonts on my AWE64Gold, but it's nowhere near the kinds of sounds you hear on most current pop. And that's what I'm trying to get. (Might be futile I know, but I'd rather not set my sights low) Have any of you ever worked with a producer who wanted to help build and mold the songs? Or can you not expect anything more than a highly qualified engineer, unless you've got thousands upon thousands to spend? What about synth capabilities? Will a studio ever have the kind of equipment necessary to make the kind of big synth sounds that you hear in modern music, or is that just going to vary from studio to studio?
What if they can only record the "real" instruments (guitar, vocal, etc)? Do I just bring in a CD-R with every synth track as an individual .wav file, and leave each track unprocessed and see what they can do? I know, of course, that I'd need a click track, and that it would be helpful to bring in a sample mix of my own... Can the tracks be improved that way? Or am I pretty much stuck with what I've got?
Basically, as a synth-driven solo artist, what can I expect from going into a studio and spending $100 an hour or so to re-record my songs? Just much better sounding vocals and guitars, with basically identical synths? Or will everything be improved? And, will the person that I work with possibly be a creative collaborator as well, or should I just expect an engineer? Or, am I just gonna have to pay them a visit and find out?
I know none of you can speak for this studio in particular. But I'm sure plenty of you have paid someone else to record you before, and I know plenty of you are getting paid to record people. I'm wondering what the general rules are, what I should go in expecting.
Here's the deal. Like so many of you, I play in a band. It's a very classicist style of rock. We claim groups like the Beatles, the Who, and Counting Crows as our influences. Thing is, I have trouble thinking of this venture as anything but something to do for a lot of fun. I left college to pursue music, and I would be willing to do anything to be able to call myself a professional musician without a day job. The other guys in the band are not like this. They would never take a risk like leaving school; and who could blame them? Of course, you can say that there's always the chance of just being "discovered", but nothing in my life has ever just fallen into my lap. Why should I expect this to? Furthermore, I sometimes have trouble with the material. I LOVE rock and roll. I'd love to be Pete Townshend. But I'm not. What on earth can I do for rock music that hasn't already been done? I'll never write the next "Yesterday" and make you want to cry. I'll never write the next "Won't Get Fooled Again" and make you want to pump your fists and break things.
My feeling is, if I want to have any chance in music, I need to try to do something that hasn't been done before, or at least expand something that hasn't been fully explored yet - which I sometimes think that rock music HAS been.
And when I try to explain to the guys what I think we COULD do, they're not interested. They just want to rock.
Thus, I've been writing and recording most of my songs by myself. I consider the music to be "pop", but hopefully... uh, the "real" kind? I'm still trying to figure out what exactly my "vision" is, but I imagine something like... I dunno, the slickness of current synth-based teen-pop, the melodies of Duran Duran, the conviction of the Smiths, the truth of Pete Townshend... I dunno. Makes me sound awfully pretentious, doesn't it? I feel, in general, that the New Wave and New Romantic genres, minus the crazy fashion trends, were never fully fleshed out... and maybe a little of that would be a breath of fresh air for the charts. But whatever.
I'm just confused as to where I can begin. I'm looking for whatever random advice that I can get... I'm starting, of course, by writing the songs. I don't know if it's realistic, but my goal is to have an album's worth of songs that I believe in, in a couple of months or so. So, I spend as much time at home recording as I can, fleshing out arrangements, getting better at singing my songs, solidifying my ideas, etc. I already have one song that's just about ready to go, and a few others that are getting there. But then I hit the first stumbling block. There are a lot of difficulties here, but what I want is a professional sound - something I can't get on my own. Basically, the first goal on my list is to have one album to my name, that I can actually release to my friends or the general public, without disclaimers. Maybe that'll leave me with 900 copies of something that I can't move, but if I'm going to do this, I want to do it right. Because I can't move on to a "real" career without regrets unless I know for sure that I didn't suceed as a musician because I wasn't good enough - not because I didn't work hard enough.
Now, some difficulties. What can I expect from going to a pro studio? Here's an example, a studio that I found here in Lansing:
http://www.lighthouserecording.com/
Now, I don't plan to go in there until I have a DAMN good idea of what I want to do. But I've never been produced by anyone but myself before. In general, when you pay that $95 an hour, what can you expect to get? Do you get a producer, or an engineer? Take Beck, for example. He's amazing, but a lot of what you hear on _Midnite Vultures_ is the work of the producer. Beck didn't sit at his computer for hours to create those amazing backing tracks. Of course, I'm not expecting to just run into somebody who's going to turn out to be the next (big name producer here). Is this something I can expect input or help with, though? A lot of my stuff is synthesizer-heavy, with guitars and stuff used for color and maybe the occasional solo. And I can get some pleasing results with soundfonts on my AWE64Gold, but it's nowhere near the kinds of sounds you hear on most current pop. And that's what I'm trying to get. (Might be futile I know, but I'd rather not set my sights low) Have any of you ever worked with a producer who wanted to help build and mold the songs? Or can you not expect anything more than a highly qualified engineer, unless you've got thousands upon thousands to spend? What about synth capabilities? Will a studio ever have the kind of equipment necessary to make the kind of big synth sounds that you hear in modern music, or is that just going to vary from studio to studio?
What if they can only record the "real" instruments (guitar, vocal, etc)? Do I just bring in a CD-R with every synth track as an individual .wav file, and leave each track unprocessed and see what they can do? I know, of course, that I'd need a click track, and that it would be helpful to bring in a sample mix of my own... Can the tracks be improved that way? Or am I pretty much stuck with what I've got?
Basically, as a synth-driven solo artist, what can I expect from going into a studio and spending $100 an hour or so to re-record my songs? Just much better sounding vocals and guitars, with basically identical synths? Or will everything be improved? And, will the person that I work with possibly be a creative collaborator as well, or should I just expect an engineer? Or, am I just gonna have to pay them a visit and find out?

I know none of you can speak for this studio in particular. But I'm sure plenty of you have paid someone else to record you before, and I know plenty of you are getting paid to record people. I'm wondering what the general rules are, what I should go in expecting.