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Advice from Phil
1) If you plan to change strings or drum
heads before the session horray for you, this will help you put your best
sound forward. Please do it a few days before the session so the
instrument(s) are ready to go at the sound check and stay in tune..
2) If you want to tune your drums this web
page may be just what you are looking for. http://www.drumweb.com/profsound.shtml
3)Tune up before each song.
4) At the beginning of each song have
someone in the band say the name of the tune, then count or tap out the
tempo ( one two three four) and begin. If you want to use a click
track (recommended) have your group agree upon and know the tempo of your
song in beats per minute (BPM) before you arrive.
5) At the end of the song, let the
instruments fade out to silence either naturally or by turning down the
volume controls. Try not to talk laugh or otherwise make noise or this
will come out in your demo,
By
Harvey Gerst,
Dear
Harvey:
My band can get our first gig but we need a seven
song demo by tomorrow. We've only got three hours to get it done between
now and when it's due. Do you got any advice you can give us?
The Anonymous Newbie
The biggest problem you'll have will be down
the road in a month or two, when you listen to this again. It'll sound
exactly like you've "recorded seven songs in three hours."
But, hey, go for it -- it may just get you
the gig. Some advice:
1. Do the easiest songs first. That way, if
you run out of time, you'll have the bulk of the songs recorded.
2. Keep the solos simple, or eliminate them
if possible. Good solos are time consuming, especially if the lead guitar
player hasn't planned out the solo, note for note.
3. Don't waste time listening to playbacks
after each song. Either you're all happy with it while you were playing
it, or it needs to be redone. If the engineer or the band didn't catch the
mistake, chances are nobody else will either.
4. Go for the groove, not technical
perfection. A little slop is acceptable, if the feeling is there.
5. It's just a demo, not a national release.
Don't get anal about it. Every band has at least one anal member that
wants everything to be perfect -- shut
him up! You've only got three hours to get this done. Accept
that it ain't gonna be perfect. Live with that fact.
6. Have fun. If that comes across on the
recording, you're in! If you're up tight during the session, that'll
come across too. If the engineer is pretty experienced, and you've
explained the situation carefully, trust his judgement to move the session
along.
7. If you can talk the engineer into it, try
to take a long break between the tracking session and the mixdown to rest
your ears.
8. During mixdown, listen to everybody's
part but your own. You're too close to it, so you'll hear everything you
didn't like, or you'll get anal about your levels. Let the band decide
your levels, and you help the band decide on their levels. Nobody should
have final say about their own part. If nobody can agree, let the engineer
decide.
9. After listening to all 7 songs, decide
which is the weakest song, and leave that one off the CD.
10. Finally, when you hand out copies of the
CD, don't apologize or explain. It is what it is. If you have to apologize
or explain why it sounds bad or weird, you shouldn't even be handing it
out.
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