
LI Slim
New member
Straw Man (and I don't mean Darryl)
I haven't seen anybody here say that since it's the song that counts, recording quality is unimportant. That's a straw man you're knocking down. Certainly, for even a great song and a great performance to be appreciated, it's got to be recorded well (with the possible exception of Dead bootlegs). The whole point of this thread is to discuss whether you can do that at home. I don't think that home=shit.
Some software compressors are a lot better than others; isn't it possible that the best programs (perhaps, yet to be written) can rival studio compressors?
There are an awful lot of people out there holding themselves out as professional studios. From my limited experience and what many others have said, I think that many of us do a lot better at home -- relaxed, unpressured, able to mix and remix and get feedback and fix and remix -- then spending a few hours in a mediocre "professional" situation, even though the studio has much more expensive equipment. And, as Dobro pointed out earlier in this thread, having the home experience is invaluable to choosing a studio and recording in that studio if you later choose to do that.
I haven't seen anybody here say that since it's the song that counts, recording quality is unimportant. That's a straw man you're knocking down. Certainly, for even a great song and a great performance to be appreciated, it's got to be recorded well (with the possible exception of Dead bootlegs). The whole point of this thread is to discuss whether you can do that at home. I don't think that home=shit.
Some software compressors are a lot better than others; isn't it possible that the best programs (perhaps, yet to be written) can rival studio compressors?
There are an awful lot of people out there holding themselves out as professional studios. From my limited experience and what many others have said, I think that many of us do a lot better at home -- relaxed, unpressured, able to mix and remix and get feedback and fix and remix -- then spending a few hours in a mediocre "professional" situation, even though the studio has much more expensive equipment. And, as Dobro pointed out earlier in this thread, having the home experience is invaluable to choosing a studio and recording in that studio if you later choose to do that.