Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you record?

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ChuckC
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2012/04/29 18:17:24 (permalink)

Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you record?

I ask because I have always set up mics to record the whole band with intent to have them play together and make sure that the take we keep has a great drum track.  The rest can be redone if the scratch guitars or bass etc. was sloppy.  but the drums are the foundation I tend to build from.   I thought this was standard prcatice and seemed common sense to me but then I was on facebook and saw a post about a friends band in a studio with a pic of them laying "scratch guitars" and it said tomorrow we track the drums!   I was like huh???
 
Then I was watching this video over at GS:
http://www.gearslutz.com/board/showwiki.php?title=Video-Vault:Metallica-Drum-Recording-Techniques
 
It seems to me Lars was playing to the tracks of everything else that had already been laid down...?   Do I have it backwards?  Is this normal?
 
Thanks guys.  This one kinda threw me off and has me questioning my methods a bit.

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    mattplaysguitar
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 19:09:40 (permalink)
    I'll personally set out a scratch drum track (MIDI, perfect timing, non exciting) then lay over an in time scratch guitar track. Scratch vocals too. Usually bass as well. All just enough to be able to get the feel of the song. I'll then track drum properly. Then add bass. Then add all the main guitar and keys etc parts. Then add vox. Then harmonies. Then all the extra little fills etc and solos. Then mix.

    That applies to my personal songs. I like to get the foundations down first and build the song up. I like to be singing to a pretty full song when I do vocals so I sing it effectivly, but my guitars will be tracked with scratch vocals in place already so I know where they need to sit in the mix when I record so there is still place for the vocals when I record them properly.

    Given the time, I'd probably want to take a similar route with recording a full band (though I've only done this once - at least a band with a drummer that is).

    Take into consideration the band's personal preferences too. They might really NEED to play together to sound good - especially if they have limited recording experience. If they are seasoned pros already, chances are they will be quite comfortable playing to headphones.

    Also the ego of the band may also mean they want to do it one way, but you just know it's not going to work as good as it can that way. I guess you need to listen to what they want, but also learn to tell them what needs to happen for the greater good of the song, sometimes. Further more, sometimes you need to actually trick them for the best performance. For example, some singers get exceedingly nervous when you say "ok, I'm recording now, make this take perfect!". You can sometimes get away with the line "I'll just get you to sing the song through a few times as a bit of a warm up and so I can get all the levels right. I won't be recording so don't worry if you screw up." Then actually record it. Little tricks like this could be very useful.

    I guess the first thing to decide is if you're playing to a click track, or playing freely. If you're going click, I'd get a quick guitar and vox scratch track down that the drummer can play to. Record that, then work your way up the instruments as you feel appropriate. Otherwise, maybe just get drummer, one guitar and vox in the room so you can get the drum take, then build the rest of the song up from there.

    There are really SO many options, and each one will suit bands and recording engineers better in different ways. So choose what works for you and the band!


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    mattplaysguitar
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 19:14:07 (permalink)
    In reference to Lars, maybe he just feels he can't put down a great drum track till everything else is already there. Maybe he needs the natural song dynamics to really play to his full potential. I know from that doco that he can be pretty darn stubborn (if I recall correctly...), so I wouldn't be surprised if he said that was how he was doing it, and that was the only way it was going to be done!

    Again, anything can work, but it's what works to get the best end result that matters. Know the techniques and decide which is appropriate in the circumstances.


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    guitartrek
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 19:59:09 (permalink)
    I think it really depends.  What Matt says is pretty typical.  I use X1 as a compositional tool.  So for me it is normally scratch guitar parts first as I write the song - along with scratch drum beats.  And then scratch vocals.  Once I have the song pretty much composed, with guitars and drums, I do it like Matt - Drums, then Bass then guitars, Keys or other parts.  The real Vocals is always the very last thing for me.

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    Jeff Evans
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 20:05:47 (permalink)
    A good way to look at it is the various approaches that one can do.

    1     Most of the band all playing together at once. No click. Good reasons for this. It can create a vibe no other method will deliver. Be careful to mike the drums well, so if you do decide to redo stuff you won't be hearing any original spill that was created. Watch Drum OH micing in this situation. I even leave headphones off in this situation. Not usually necessary. Most people in the same room during tracking.

    2     Most of the band all playing together at once with click. Headphones on obviously. Maybe put people in different locations to reduce spill. If people are in the same room, same thing applies to micing to reduce spill for replacement parts. The click is going to constrain things slightly so the need for lots of people playing together is not as great but can still work if all the musicians are great players to click tracks. (not that many around!)


    3     Part of the music first and to a click. Drums are hard to play when there is little music to be guided by or get inspired by. Good idea to build up some parts for the drummer to get into. Vocals or guide vox useful here as a roadmap for drummer through the arrangement. Click will keep everyone in check timing wise.

    4     Part of the music first but to no click. And if these first parts do not involve drums this is the harder scenario for the drummer to add to later unless the groove is relentless and amazing. But if it's varying here and there then it's harder work for drummer later due to the fact they will have to learn the music before they can overdub over it. Takes longer as well.

    So ChuckC have a think about these situations and try and determine which one is more likely going to be the way it's done.

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    Guitarhacker
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 20:33:01 (permalink)
    Record a scratch track  vocal and piano or guitar to a click track or a synth drum track..... if you are multitracking it, I would record the bass next, and then guitars, piano, strings and all other instruments  with the final tracks being the keeper vocal track. 

    Drummers I have known and worked with didn't work well with a click. They have an ego issue..... believing that they have superior timing skills..... (not!) 






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    AT
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 22:49:38 (permalink)
    I try to get the rhythm part done in one take.  Drums, guitar and bass - even if I have to DI the G&B.  As Jeff says it can yield the most natural, band results and one builds from that.  Many "bands" that are just starting recording simply aren't up to patching together a performance - not everyone in the band, anyway.  If you have studio-grade musicians, they can play it backwards and never miss a lick.  But unless the band is experienced and used to recording, give them a foundation just like a live set.

    Also, if you are using a band going from "live" to studio some of them will have a hard time getting the idea of layering tracks since they are used to doing one track in real time.  As the engineer you need to step into the producer shoes (they probably won't have one or maybe a friend who knows less about production than they do) and help them flesh out a song w/ more than just each playing it as if they were live. 

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    droddey
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 23:20:18 (permalink)
    In the bazzillions of documentaries I've watched, it seems to be extremely common to track a basic rhythm section (with the singer singing along) with complete separation between drums, guitar and bass, with the goal of getting a great drum track. If anything else during that process just happens to come out really good, then great and keep it, but it's not necessarily expected.

    I think it's unfortunate that that is so often done, since it definitely is putting sonics and technical perfection ahead of vibe and performance. But it's clearly very common, even with very technically accomplished bands like Rush.

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    ChuckC
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/29 23:22:22 (permalink)
    Yep I suppose however it works best and makes the musicians you are working with most comfortable.  

    With the record my band just did we recorded the drums midi via V drums but I sent the audio with the (though with click for most songs engaged) from the drums to our PA system just like when we rehearse (minus the click).  I recorded the bass DI and it was coming out of the amp too.  I put a 57 on each guitar cab which got very little bleed and was usable for the final recordings on most songs (unless the performance was lack luster).  We had the 3 Sm58's up like we do for vox in practice so I ran an aux from my board with all 3 vocal mics fed to it into my interface to capture scratch vocals.
      When I was done in some cases all I needed to do was go back and layer some additional guitar tracks to fatten it up and lay down the vocals one at a time with better mic's.  The last 4 songs on the record went very smooth for us this way.  The guitar mics did pick up a hair of the click but I just used those tracks as my "warm tracks" with a LPF to cut out the upper frequencies with the click and layered in some brighter tones on subsequent takes.

       On solo stuff I have done guitar and vocals to a click then tracked the drums myself to those (while listening to the click too).    The other guitarist in my band does much better with everyone playing together, he fights a click and panics when the red light goes on....  I really don't care either way, it's never phased me much.  Playing is playing and I may not be the fanciest guitarist-drummer-bassist-vocalist out there but I am nothing if not consistant and solid.

      Thanks for the replies guys.

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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 07:35:27 (permalink)
    Hi Chuck,
     I just went and listened to the Black Album.

     The drums actually sound like they are played last... they sort of sound that way both mix wise and arrangement wise. It seems as if they were played right on top of everything else. The drums react to the guitar rather than serve as a core foundation. They do form a frame work or reference to the tempo... but it's more like a net thrown over the top.

     I listened to the whole album and never got the sense that a bass player and a drummer were locked up and throwing down a groove. (Actually, Struggle Within almost sounded like a band playing together... but the guitar timing was sloppy if you regard the drums as the reference... go figure.)

     The whole band seems to follow the percussive strumming of the guitar strings or occasionally a slow motion bass arpeggio.

     It is a distinctive sound and if you are looking for that type of feel then it seems like  playing drums last is a good approach.

     best regards,
    mike






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    mattplaysguitar
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 08:17:42 (permalink)
    Yeah, choosing the most important element and letting everything play to that may be something to consider. I guess Metallica thought they wanted the guitars to really drive the album and the drums were there for an 'added effect', hence tracking that way makes sense. I personally want my drums to be the backbone of the timing and everything goes to that, but everything has its place. All depends on the style of music and the direction you want to go with it.

    If they musicians aren't that experienced, you may not notice the difference, however. Just record it in a way that they are able to play to!


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    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 09:29:18 (permalink)
    ChuckC


    It seems to me Lars was playing to the tracks of everything else that had already been laid down...?   Do I have it backwards?  Is this normal?
     
    Thanks guys.  This one kinda threw me off and has me questioning my methods a bit.
    That's actually how I do it too Chuck...drums after the bass and guitars are done. However, I always record a click track first before I do anything else. I don't like the regular click track that most people use though. I like to create a midi sequence of the drum line and then guitars and bass are recorded. The reason I leave the drums for later is because I know that I will play differently when the core of instruments is there as opposed to playing without them.
     
    Like for example, as a drummer I like to feed off of the bass guitar yet I may accent certain parts along with the rhythm guitars. If I do the drums first, I sort of lose this feel of feeding off the other instruments. We actually recorded my last album like this as well. Click track, guitars then bass, then our drummer came back and played along to us and the click track at the same time. Other times, we tracked at the same time with bass, guitars and a scratch vocal just so everyone knew where we were in the the song. The whole take at this point, was for the drums to be printed. But it really didn't matter which way we used..both were equally lethal and worked fine.
     
    I leave all the special type instruments for last. You know...like back-up vocals, piano/keys, lead guitars, acoustics. However, if those instruments are main focal points in the song, they go down before the drums. But if they are just backing type instruments to fill things out, I always do them last. It really depends on the situation. It also depends on the band you're working with too. Some guys just need a different system in order to record properly. They feed off of different things, so you may find yourself accommodating.....which also goes with the territory.
     
    But most times, I';ve been successful with all bands when I make them play to a midi drum beat as opposed to a regular click track. I pan it off to one side and it works great because just about every drummer has played to cover songs while honing his chops. Hearing a beat instead of a click sort of relaxes them so that they aren't trying super hard to hone in on just "that annoying click". So experiment and see what may work best brother. Good luck. :)
     
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    batsbrew
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 11:31:17 (permalink)
    what order do you record? 



    it does not matter.


    this is the engineering part, overlapping with the 'art' part.


    todd rundgren, way back when he used to do his own drums, would walk into a studio, sit at the kit, and play along to......... nothing.


    except what was going in his head.


    then  he'd go back, and overdub guitars, bass, keys, etc.....


    and even the engineer would not know where he was going with it, until enough have been put down to hear the arrangement.




    the 'art' part of songwriting, is finding the method that works for you, and it does not matter what anyone else does.


    don't force it, just find it.



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    ChuckC
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 14:06:16 (permalink)
    Mike & Matt-
      Yeah guys for sure...  It seems to me if the drums aren't there first that the whole song will take on a different feel and other elements will be the ones pushing the song along.  I guess if it works for that band and that song all is well but my stuff tends to be aggressive and the snare really leads most of the songs, if it's on or behind the beat it would really get wierd to me.

    Danny-  I wouldn't have guessed that you would tend to record that way, I'd have figured with access to a nice big studio (or two) like you do that you'd set up and lay most of it down at once, overdub as needed.
    What ever works right!   I can understand how it would be easier for a band to record to a midi drum track rather than a click.  That makes total sense.  I have yet to program a drum sequence so that would take me a while the 1st time or too should I decide to try it. 

    Bats- thanks for the input.  I don't know who todd rundgren is but it's funny that you mention that method...
    The night that I was going to lay down the drums for our song "peace from my mind" (the one I recently posted a video for in the song forum)  it was only one guitarist and I that could make it to practice that evening so I figured I'd get that done to make use of the time.   He was really kinda throwing me the hell off as we were both trying to play to the click.  I ended up telling him to just play throught the intro then once the drums come in please.... just stop and put the guitar down.  I played the drums all the way through to just the click and nailed the 2nd attempt once we went to that method.  Everything else was tracked afterwards.

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    UbiquitousBubba
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 14:40:45 (permalink)
    I worked on a collab where we took this approach:

    1. The guitarist recorded scratch rhythm guitar and bass tracks set to a looped midi-drum track instead of a click
    2. I muted the midi-drum track and recorded the final drum tracks
    3. The guitarist re-recorded new rhythm, bass and lead tracks
    4. I laid down the lead and backing vocal tracks

    This method enabled both of us to have a sense of the other's parts when we recorded our own.

    I worked on another collaboration with a keyboardist where some or all of the keyboard tracks were recorded before drums were laid down.  In this case, he was comfortable playing to a click, so he didn't feel he needed to play against the real drum track.

    When I've recorded drums prior to any other tracks, I like to do so playing along with something as a point of reference.  If I can hear a guitar part, or keyboard part, I can lock into the groove of the song and avoid losing my place in it.  So many songs have such a repetitive drum pattern, it can be easy to let your mind wander if you don't have something to keep it busy.  YPMV (Your Professionalism May Vary...)
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    droddey
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 14:43:46 (permalink)
    BTW, it's pretty well known that the Black Album drums were a huge hodge-podge. They were practically doing DAW level editing on tape. The folks involved have talked about how they'd end up with a tape so full of splices that they would immediately bounce it to another tape because they didn't trust it to stay together more than one run through. They put up a bunch of mics, placed all over the room, then chose a bunch of them and, from what they said, EQ'd the crap out of them.

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    ChuckC
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 15:54:21 (permalink)
    Yeah that video talks a lot about it.  Sounds like a PITA to me and while the drums sound big, I dodn't think they sound so much bigger that it was worth all that.  especially because they were dealling with tape and manual destructive editing.  Must be nice to have a drum recording budget (per song) that exceeds what most bands have to do entire albums by a lot. 
        IF my drummer turned to me and said "NO!, today I am only doing the verses for this song, tomorrow the choruses, and one wednesday If I am up to it we'll get the fills down..."   I'd have a new freakin drummer by wednesday.   I watch that video an I am thinking.... what I premadonna!?   He's solid as a drummer but he isn't all that.  Neil Peart?  I could understand if he tracked that way, but not Lars?  I could be pissing people off by saying it but I just never thought.... Wow that guys incredible.  He plays heavy but it's not technical or overly complicated.  Keep in mind though I am saying this based on their hits(radio/MTV.  I have never liked Metallica enough to buy a single one of their records or singles.  They, like a lot of gangsta rap always turned my off by trying to front a really "tough" image and taking themselves too seriously.  It was never my cup of tea.

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    jamesg1213
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/04/30 16:01:35 (permalink)
    mike_mccue


    Hi Chuck,
    I just went and listened to the Black Album.

    The drums actually sound like they are played last... they sort of sound that way both mix wise and arrangement wise. It seems as if they were played right on top of everything else. The drums react to the guitar rather than serve as a core foundation. They do form a frame work or reference to the tempo... but it's more like a net thrown over the top.

    I listened to the whole album and never got the sense that a bass player and a drummer were locked up and throwing down a groove. (Actually, Struggle Within almost sounded like a band playing together... but the guitar timing was sloppy if you regard the drums as the reference... go figure.)

    The whole band seems to follow the percussive strumming of the guitar strings or occasionally a slow motion bass arpeggio.

    It is a distinctive sound and if you are looking for that type of feel then it seems like  playing drums last is a good approach.

    best regards,
    mike


    Mike, if you watch that documentary I linked to in the CH thread, you'll see exactly how they did the drums - the whole band playing together, doing multiple takes of the song (presumably to a click, that wasn't clear), then the best parts of the various drum takes were spliced together.

    This also how Daniel Lanois approached Manu Katche's drums on Peter Gabriel's  'So' sessions - ''bar 32, take 6, yeah that's the one, use that..''

    Very time-consuming obviously (especially with tape and razor blades!), but the ethos was that they wanted the 'ultimate performance' to go on the record.

     
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    #18
    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/01 04:00:43 (permalink)
    ChuckC


    Danny-  I wouldn't have guessed that you would tend to record that way, I'd have figured with access to a nice big studio (or two) like you do that you'd set up and lay most of it down at once, overdub as needed.
    What ever works right!   I can understand how it would be easier for a band to record to a midi drum track rather than a click.  That makes total sense.  I have yet to program a drum sequence so that would take me a while the 1st time or too should I decide to try it.  


    That's mostly for myself Chuck and how it happened to pan out when we did my last album in 2004. There really are no rules though. For example, my original band...we track in real time. It depends how well our sounds are set up. If we go through the motions to really set things up, we'll track things and go back and over-dub our mistakes. If we don't go through the motions for perfect sounds, we track for the sake of the drums only and go back and redo our parts completely with really good sounds.
    In my cover band, we tracked it all live and then went back and fixed any blatant mistakes. You just go with what works for a band in that particular situation really. :) Good luck man.

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    #19
    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/01 06:50:28 (permalink)
    jamesg1213


    mike_mccue


    Hi Chuck,
    I just went and listened to the Black Album.

    The drums actually sound like they are played last... they sort of sound that way both mix wise and arrangement wise. It seems as if they were played right on top of everything else. The drums react to the guitar rather than serve as a core foundation. They do form a frame work or reference to the tempo... but it's more like a net thrown over the top.

    I listened to the whole album and never got the sense that a bass player and a drummer were locked up and throwing down a groove. (Actually, Struggle Within almost sounded like a band playing together... but the guitar timing was sloppy if you regard the drums as the reference... go figure.)

    The whole band seems to follow the percussive strumming of the guitar strings or occasionally a slow motion bass arpeggio.

    It is a distinctive sound and if you are looking for that type of feel then it seems like  playing drums last is a good approach.

    best regards,
    mike


    Mike, if you watch that documentary I linked to in the CH thread, you'll see exactly how they did the drums - the whole band playing together, doing multiple takes of the song (presumably to a click, that wasn't clear), then the best parts of the various drum takes were spliced together.

    This also how Daniel Lanois approached Manu Katche's drums on Peter Gabriel's  'So' sessions - ''bar 32, take 6, yeah that's the one, use that..''

    Very time-consuming obviously (especially with tape and razor blades!), but the ethos was that they wanted the 'ultimate performance' to go on the record.


    It has been my impression that if I were to watch that video that I would probably never actually listen to the record, so I started with the record and now feel like I don't need to see the video. :-)

    I did go listen to the earlier records later in the afternoon and that reminded me what a great band Metallica is at times.

    best regards,
    mike



    #20
    RabbitSeason
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/01 15:27:49 (permalink)
    ChuckC


    Yep I suppose however it works best and makes the musicians you are working with most comfortable.   
    That's an excellent approach Chuck.  Who knows how the session will go?  But if you're ready for anything, you should wind up with an excellent finished product and a happy customer.
     
    If you've got guys that have rehearsed the heck out of the songs, that scratch track will be all the foundation you'll need.  With it, the drummer can lay down the groove, guitar and bass can add their parts, and adding vocals will be a snap.  With all the rehearsing, I've been able to nail my bass and vox parts in 1-2 takes.  It almost doesn't matter which order you record, if everyone knows their parts.
     
    However, if you've got a drummer who decides to "change it up" or God forbid "try something new" in the studio, then he'd better go first.
     
    If you've got a band that wants to play together with no click, then hopefully they're familiar with the idea of overdubs.  I've seen some younger (teen) musicians surprised when their first take is deemed unworthy.  "What do you mean do it again?  I was awesome!"

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    #21
    ChuckC
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/01 17:16:35 (permalink)
    Yeah I have seen that too, or worse when they feel they don't need a metronome at all, their timing is aweful then they got a 8 bar break with just guitar and vocals, then when it comes time to over dub he can't get the timing right coming back in...

    "No dude, you sped up and got their early....
    Nope,ya slower down, A little late...
    Still late.....
    Dude you can hear the scratch track in the cans right? ok try it again, relax you got this!
    Ehhh.... early again
    You we're even earlier that time...
    Late once again.....
    OMG give me the F*#%ing guitar!!"   HAHA

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    #22
    Philip
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/02 18:40:18 (permalink)
    batsbrew


    the 'art' part of songwriting, is finding the method that works for you, and it does not matter what anyone else does.


    don't force it, just find it.
    -- Hahahahahah!  Well spoken!  This is a great topic that all of us struggle with.
     
    I couldn't agree more with Bat! 
     
    Methinks, studio-engineering of performance-art is a tricky business. Here's my personal quirks on creating song-creatures (and may not work for others):
     
    Reminder: its best to concentrate on creating a new creature in the studio ... lest you fall into the stereotypical garage-band snare.  Its time to think more in terms of selecting 'samples' and less on selecting 'performances' ... like an artist ... but much more creative than an artist.
     
    Besides, perfecto engineering of live performances requires a great expensive force of mics, studios, production engineers, etc.  Some commercial recording studios claim they can approach this.  But the results may be stereotypical, IMHO ... unless you go home with all the tracks recorded by the commercial studio
     
    Then its time to spend some additional loving care that the hireling producer won't.  Like: Manual compressions, LCR panning, Transient shaping of bass and drums, Haas fx's, reverb, gel, beatz and grooves, etc. etc.  ... whatever the new song-creature requires to your ears and the ears of your target audience.
     
    I have found that the beatz-meister wins the day ... especially for the metal drummer.  I'd get at least 8 stereo-mic layers of his samples and make his percussives snap, crack, and pop in every conceivable manner ... succinctly and professionally.  Expect that alone to take an inordinant amount of time ... like 40 hours.
     
    Then I'd let my faith finish the beatz (with your wild vision) and not finish the song til Danzi or someone has reviewed the beatz.
     
    Invariably, home studio-art must win the day: Like a portrait painting of another's portrait painting ... a new creature twice removed from the original song-creature ... a different and much greater animal ... hopefully immortal.
     
    IOWs, its better that you alone must now play producer and decide your protocols ... from song creation to song print ... with recordings spattered everywhere in-between.  But the drums had better get real.
     
    The words of Yep and Yoyo might apply: "Finished is better than perfect"
     
    Like ... urgently get the track samples recorded onto tracks and take it from there ... retake, re-perform, and re-sample any way you desperately can.
    post edited by Philip - 2012/05/02 18:43:21

    Philip  
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    #23
    BenMMusTech
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/02 19:50:14 (permalink)
    Here Chuck C Read this http://www.amazon.com/Here-There-Everywhere-Recording-Beatles/dp/1592401791

    Everybody can hand out advice but guess what, THERE ARE NO RULES, this book will teach you this!!!!

    The sooner you get over is there a way?, the better you will become at the creative prospects of audio engineering.

    He who shall remain nameless was correct in saying a band playing together without a click track is a good way to do things but that is sooo last century!!!.

    Look as long as the bass player or the rhythm guitarist has the technique and can play to a click track, you can start almost anywhere.

    If you are The Beatles, you can even do it without a click track.

    Ok to reiterate:

    NO RULE"S, we can be Digital Punks
    and read Emericks book.  Also try this one: http://www.amazon.com/The-Beatles-Recording-Sessions-1962-1970/dp/0517581825

    These guys invented modern studio recordings, without historical perspective it's like pissing in the dark and you will end up with piss on your boots, LOL

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    #24
    Jonbouy
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/03 11:20:49 (permalink)
    Jeff Evans


    A good way to look at it is the various approaches that one can do.

    1     Most of the band all playing together at once. No click. Good reasons for this. It can create a vibe no other method will deliver. Be careful to mike the drums well, so if you do decide to redo stuff you won't be hearing any original spill that was created. Watch Drum OH micing in this situation. I even leave headphones off in this situation. Not usually necessary. Most people in the same room during tracking.

    2     Most of the band all playing together at once with click. Headphones on obviously. Maybe put people in different locations to reduce spill. If people are in the same room, same thing applies to micing to reduce spill for replacement parts. The click is going to constrain things slightly so the need for lots of people playing together is not as great but can still work if all the musicians are great players to click tracks. (not that many around!)


    3     Part of the music first and to a click. Drums are hard to play when there is little music to be guided by or get inspired by. Good idea to build up some parts for the drummer to get into. Vocals or guide vox useful here as a roadmap for drummer through the arrangement. Click will keep everyone in check timing wise.

    4     Part of the music first but to no click. And if these first parts do not involve drums this is the harder scenario for the drummer to add to later unless the groove is relentless and amazing. But if it's varying here and there then it's harder work for drummer later due to the fact they will have to learn the music before they can overdub over it. Takes longer as well.

    So ChuckC have a think about these situations and try and determine which one is more likely going to be the way it's done.


    That about covers it.

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    #25
    webbs hill studio
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/09 19:55:50 (permalink)
    That about covers it.


    +1
    amen
    #26
    Jeff Evans
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/09 20:31:43 (permalink)
    ............a band playing together without a click track is a good way to do things but that is sooo last century!!!.

    This is just SOOOOOO wrong! Lets talk about a music genre that cannot really be recorded with a click and that is Jazz of course (real music, that will get a reaction wont it! LOL) It has always been done that way for decades and it still being done that way even right now as we speak. So nothing last century about that.

    But it does bring up a good point about the fact as soon as many bands come into any studio situation there seems to be this thing of lets put everyone in separate spaces and put phones on everybody and away we go. The moment you put headphones on musicians even if they are all in the same room you are isolating people and that is that. Recording live all in a room without any headphones can be a refreshing experience. You can even have a modest PA setup in there so people can hear vocals and things and if you are careful with mic placement you won't record it.

    But it takes a very good band to do this though and that is where many problems arise. Because if there is even a hint of difficulty in any aspect of the tune then going onto a click and headphones is a great way of ensuring at least that everything is going to come out reasonably well.

    Musicians (all instruments) need to practice to a metronome (or some form of regular groove) more often than they do and then click playing would be far easier for everyone concerned. A band should not even get close to a studio if they are not ready (or good enough) to record, simple as that. I always listen to them live before I even contemplate recording them. In many cases I simply say no.

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    #27
    webbs hill studio
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/09 23:10:57 (permalink)
    "No dude, you sped up and got their early.... Nope,ya slower down, A little late... Still late..... Dude you can hear the scratch track in the cans right? ok try it again, relax you got this! Ehhh.... early again You we're even earlier that time... Late once again..... OMG give me the F*#%ing guitar!!"   HAHA

    hey Chuck-been there!
    i try to get the band in for "pre-production" first and record them live as a "soundcheck".that way they are less nervous than if they were"actually" recording and i concentrate on feedback from the drummer mainly as to whether the take feels and sounds good to him or her and depending on how loud the band is and therefore how much spill there is in the overheads and usually the soundcheck takes become the drum tracks.
    once again it`s horses for courses and i record live exclusively(and cheaply) and the bands i get are aware of that and i will only overdub if there is a technical problem or the overall track quality justifies it.
    referencing jeffevans-i had a band last week where the chorus kicked in at 106db on the meter-no lie-JCM`s and a SVT in my small room-they refused to turn down as they would "lose the energy" and i refused to record them-no skin off my nose.
    not advice just an opinion from a home studio operator cranking out budget demo`s.   
    ps:i`ve never used a clicktrack successfully and it`s up to the client to decide if they are "in time" or not.
    one  reason people record live is to catch the push and pull and the "feel" of a live performance(a couple of extra bpm between the verse and chorus) rather than the fidelity of the recording-i`ve been known to play behind the beat and over the bar which raises a few eyebrows but can be effective.
    once again -horses for courses
    cheers
    #28
    mattplaysguitar
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/09 23:12:56 (permalink)
    I always listen to them live before I even contemplate recording them. In many cases I simply say no. 

    Wise words and a rule I would strictly follow also.




    There is a place for all recording methods. Playing to a click is common with a large number of genres these days, but as Jeff said, it's really not going to be the best result for all styles of music. Some music just needs that natural groove that comes from a good band playing well together. The bleed you get from all the mics combined can really add a nice feel to everything too, if done well.


    There is no right on wrong way to record. Every method (well, maybe not EVERY, but most) has it's place here and there. It just depends on the music, musicians, and the sound they are trying to achieve.


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    #29
    mattplaysguitar
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    Re:Say you have a typical rock band: drums, bass, 2 guits & vox... what order do you recor 2012/05/09 23:16:27 (permalink)
    Speaking of speeding up in a chorus, anyone played around with using a metronome and actually putting in a gradual 1 or 2 BPM increase leading up to a chorus to try and simulate that feel, but still have a tight sounding song? Done well, I think it can work alright, but it needs to be programmed well so it still sounds natural.


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    #30
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