jonastronaut
Joined: Mar 19, 2010
Posts: 46
The Netherlands
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Posted on Nov 28 2011 02:37 PM
Hi people,
My band The Surfaders are going tot record a CD in January. Right now we're discussing how everything should sound. The lead guitar can use a dot of reverb of course... but how about rhythm guitar(s). Do you guys record rhythm with the same amount of reverb as lead guitar, or with less?
— The Surfaders official website
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caddady
Joined: Feb 14, 2010
Posts: 802
N.E. Ohio
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Posted on Nov 28 2011 03:14 PM
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jonastronaut
Joined: Mar 19, 2010
Posts: 46
The Netherlands
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 03:43 AM
Thanks, exactly what I was looking for. Good ideas indeed.
— The Surfaders official website
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clepak
Joined: Jun 11, 2006
Posts: 551
Liege (Belgium)
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 04:38 AM
Another question related to this thread : some studio engineers recommends to put less reverb in the original guitar sound and put it later in the mix. to me it seems stupid because it won't sound the same at all.
should we shot the guy in the head then burry his corpse or should we consider the is insane ?
seriously, does that makes sense ?
— Monkey Ju
Pirato Ketchup
Facebook
Bandcamp
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Ariel
Joined: Aug 29, 2009
Posts: 1556
Israel
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 06:58 AM
clepak wrote:
Another question related to this thread : some studio
engineers recommends to put less reverb in the original
guitar sound and put it later in the mix. to me it
seems stupid because it won't sound the same at all.
should we shot the guy in the head then burry his
corpse or should we consider the is insane ?
seriously, does that makes sense ?
I'm not too knowledgeable, but just following common sense:
Depends if the AE knows his Surf. I mean, really into it like the rest of us. Because if not, and that's usually the case, they lack DRIP APPRECIATION. They're afraid of too much, so they compromise for too little.
Seems like a proper advice for most genres, as it allows more control over the mix and that's a good thing. Surely you're right, it won't sound the same at all. The differences mentioned here and other threads between onboard and tank unit would be even more exaggerated. It's mostly the attack we're looking for, not space and tail. Now how would you add that back after the recording? Although experiments can be made with exciters and stuff (and there are very good spring reverb algorithms if mixing digitally), I believe the proper classic way it to get your best sound at the source. Or even better - add a parallel direct recording path on top of the mic'ed one, so you can then do whatever you want including re-amping, or mixing both the signals with different processing.
As for punishment, education is better. Tie him up in his studio and force him to listen to The Astronauts non stop for 24 hours.
Last edited: Nov 30, 2011 07:01:09
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clepak
Joined: Jun 11, 2006
Posts: 551
Liege (Belgium)
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 07:06 AM
DreadInBabylon wrote:
As for punishment, education is better. Tie him up in
his studio and force him to listen to The Astronauts
non stop for 24 hours.
Now, that makes sense !
— Monkey Ju
Pirato Ketchup
Facebook
Bandcamp
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caddady
Joined: Feb 14, 2010
Posts: 802
N.E. Ohio
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 10:28 AM
Now there you go!
One track nice and clean so the engineer believes he has control and one as nasty, drippy, wet as you please to make the band happy.
— http://www.reverbnation.com/thegreasemonkeyz
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PolloGuitar
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 5091
San Francisco
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 10:58 AM
First, tell the engineer to shut up and listen. It's your guitar, make it sound the way you want. Second, listen for yourself, if there's too much reverb on your guitar you can't hear the other instruments, then make an adjustment.
THERE ARE 2 KINDS OF REVERB!
1- The room or atmosphere. This is the natural ambient sound of the room you record in. It becomes another instrument to be reckoned with in the mix, a kind of stew where all different instruments and drums come together. If the instruments are recorded separately, natural ambience can be faked many ways, including using digital reverbs, or by another technique I love-- during mix down, send your mix to a monitor in the studio room and set up a mic to re-record the sound.
2- The sound of the surf guitar, as we all know, is defined by the tick of the strings rattling the springs. It's true that you can have so much splash that it overwhelms all the other instruments. It's up to you to refine your sound so that the splash isn't long, but more percussive with a quick decay
— Buy Speed of Dark @ Bandcamp
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DJ Frankie Pool Boy on North Sea Surf Radio
Last edited: Nov 30, 2011 10:58:53
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jonastronaut
Joined: Mar 19, 2010
Posts: 46
The Netherlands
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 12:32 PM
Interesting and helpful stuff! Something else related to this thread as well: last time we were in the studio I noticed the engineer didn't grasp the idea of the lead guitar being "the voice" in the mix. He wanted to record the songs as regular rock, but without the vocals. So in the first mix, the lead guitar was almost nowhere to be found. We made him listen to surfmusic and for him the leadguitar was too loud and too present there. Does that sound familiar to you?
Another thing: I guess reverby tones are hard to record. The last time in the studio, the reverb ate up a microfone (stopped recording here and there). Also, in (semi-)live recordings the lead guitar sounds often more in the background than you want to (at least I do). Can you fix that with a reverby track and a dry track, or are there other ways?
— The Surfaders official website
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killbabykill34
Joined: Apr 03, 2010
Posts: 3201
Jacksonville, AL
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 12:56 PM
jonastronaut wrote:
Interesting and helpful stuff! Something else related
to this thread as well: last time we were in the studio
I noticed the engineer didn't grasp the idea of the
lead guitar being "the voice" in the mix. He wanted to
record the songs as regular rock, but without the
vocals. So in the first mix, the lead guitar was almost
nowhere to be found. We made him listen to surfmusic
and for him the leadguitar was too loud and too present
there. Does that sound familiar to you?
Another thing: I guess reverby tones are hard to
record. The last time in the studio, the reverb ate up
a microfone (stopped recording here and there). Also,
in (semi-)live recordings the lead guitar sounds often
more in the background than you want to (at least I
do). Can you fix that with a reverby track and a dry
track, or are there other ways?
When we recorded our recent EP, we had to contend with an Engineer who had the same mentality. While the early mixes he came up with were good, they did not fit the surf asthetic of 'guitar as lead voice'. It took quite a few go-arounds with him to get them out in the mix like we wanted. While we were satisfied with the final product, there are still a few areas where I do not believe the real tone of the guitar was brought out enough(see Doomsday cults on the recent SG101 podcast).
Anyway, we find this problem to be more prevalent when we are out playing live. On average, we prefer to play floor level venues where you just plug into your amps and perform. None-the-less, we are often at clubs with stages and sound systems with soundguys. This is when it tends to be a problem. We usually have to spend the first three songs with our merch guy going back to the sound guy to get the guitar up in the mix.
— THE KBK ... This is the last known signal. We offer Sanctuary.
www.thekbk.com
http://www.deepeddy.net/artists/thekbk/
www.reverbnation.com/thekbk
www.facebook.com/thekbkal
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Las_Barracudas
Joined: Apr 24, 2011
Posts: 1087
Surf City, NC
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 02:11 PM
killbabykill34 wrote:
jonastronaut wrote:
Interesting and helpful stuff! Something else
related
to this thread as well: last time we were in the
studio
I noticed the engineer didn't grasp the idea of the
lead guitar being "the voice" in the mix. He wanted
to
record the songs as regular rock, but without the
vocals. So in the first mix, the lead guitar was
almost
nowhere to be found. We made him listen to surfmusic
and for him the leadguitar was too loud and too
present
there. Does that sound familiar to you?
Another thing: I guess reverby tones are hard to
record. The last time in the studio, the reverb ate
up
a microfone (stopped recording here and there).
Also,
in (semi-)live recordings the lead guitar sounds
often
more in the background than you want to (at least I
do). Can you fix that with a reverby track and a dry
track, or are there other ways?
When we recorded our recent EP, we had to contend with
an Engineer who had the same mentality. While the early
mixes he came up with were good, they did not fit the
surf asthetic of 'guitar as lead voice'. It took quite
a few go-arounds with him to get them out in the mix
like we wanted. While we were satisfied with the final
product, there are still a few areas where I do not
believe the real tone of the guitar was brought out
enough(see Doomsday cults on the recent SG101
podcast).
Anyway, we find this problem to be more prevalent when
we are out playing live. On average, we prefer to play
floor level venues where you just plug into your amps
and perform. None-the-less, we are often at clubs with
stages and sound systems with soundguys. This is when
it tends to be a problem. We usually have to spend the
first three songs with our merch guy going back to the
sound guy to get the guitar up in the mix.
I hear ya...and these guys are "supposed to be the pros", and they're usually the ones blowing smoke about how much experience they have (recording / mixing)??
— METEOR IV on reverbnation
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killbabykill34
Joined: Apr 03, 2010
Posts: 3201
Jacksonville, AL
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 02:43 PM
Las_Barracudas wrote:
killbabykill34 wrote:
jonastronaut wrote:
Interesting and helpful stuff! Something else
related
to this thread as well: last time we were in the
studio
I noticed the engineer didn't grasp the idea of
the
lead guitar being "the voice" in the mix. He
wanted
to
record the songs as regular rock, but without the
vocals. So in the first mix, the lead guitar was
almost
nowhere to be found. We made him listen to
surfmusic
and for him the leadguitar was too loud and too
present
there. Does that sound familiar to you?
Another thing: I guess reverby tones are hard to
record. The last time in the studio, the reverb
ate
up
a microfone (stopped recording here and there).
Also,
in (semi-)live recordings the lead guitar sounds
often
more in the background than you want to (at least
I
do). Can you fix that with a reverby track and a
dry
track, or are there other ways?
When we recorded our recent EP, we had to contend
with
an Engineer who had the same mentality. While the
early
mixes he came up with were good, they did not fit
the
surf asthetic of 'guitar as lead voice'. It took
quite
a few go-arounds with him to get them out in the mix
like we wanted. While we were satisfied with the
final
product, there are still a few areas where I do not
believe the real tone of the guitar was brought out
enough(see Doomsday cults on the recent SG101
podcast).
Anyway, we find this problem to be more prevalent
when
we are out playing live. On average, we prefer to
play
floor level venues where you just plug into your
amps
and perform. None-the-less, we are often at clubs
with
stages and sound systems with soundguys. This is
when
it tends to be a problem. We usually have to spend
the
first three songs with our merch guy going back to
the
sound guy to get the guitar up in the mix.
I hear ya...and these guys are "supposed to be the
pros", and they're usually the ones blowing smoke about
how much experience they have (recording / mixing)??
Meh...We usually do not get too upset unless it is somethign that they refuse to correct. Frankly, this isn't a style of music that most of these guys are exposed to outside of background music in cheesy commecials.
— THE KBK ... This is the last known signal. We offer Sanctuary.
www.thekbk.com
http://www.deepeddy.net/artists/thekbk/
www.reverbnation.com/thekbk
www.facebook.com/thekbkal
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insectsurfer
Joined: Mar 22, 2006
Posts: 363
Los Angeles
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 04:45 PM
on our first LA record 'reverb Sun', the engineer had us turn the reverb WAYYY down , and added it later. Sounded ok.... Our 2nd recording "Death Valley Coastline' the engineer let us use Our regular amp settings, and it sounded WAYY BETTER!!
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killbabykill34
Joined: Apr 03, 2010
Posts: 3201
Jacksonville, AL
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 04:53 PM
insectsurfer wrote:
on our first LA record 'reverb Sun', the engineer had
us turn the reverb WAYYY down , and added it later.
Sounded ok.... Our 2nd recording "Death Valley
Coastline' the engineer let us use Our regular amp
settings, and it sounded WAYY BETTER!!
Haha...that was another thing that I argued with our engineer about while recording the EP. He was very staunch in his opinion that the reverb needed reduced.
— THE KBK ... This is the last known signal. We offer Sanctuary.
www.thekbk.com
http://www.deepeddy.net/artists/thekbk/
www.reverbnation.com/thekbk
www.facebook.com/thekbkal
|
Bilge_Rat
Joined: Apr 20, 2009
Posts: 320
Toronto, Ontario Canada
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 07:46 PM
Unless the engineer has fender amplitube, do it your own way.
— formerly SvD, bots.... member since 2006. Same game different name!
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Noel
Joined: Mar 15, 2011
Posts: 8528
Back in Piitsburgh, Pennsylvania, where I grew up.
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Posted on Nov 30 2011 08:31 PM
I guess Ferenc is going to be a lot busier. Great music deserves the best.
— This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got.
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aqualadius
Joined: Aug 30, 2010
Posts: 414
Charlotte, NC
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Posted on Dec 02 2011 06:47 AM
Has anyone tried going direct from the amp with no reverb, then putting the signal back through the tank during playback to dial in the right amount of fender reverb? My engineer wanted to try this and I thought it may work. But how it's easier to mix reverb that has been applied after the fact, instead of at the moment I don't understand. I will want the sound I want regardless, and he'll have to mix it regardless. Maybe he's talking about all of the friggin edits he has to do
— Jeremy
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Noel
Joined: Mar 15, 2011
Posts: 8528
Back in Piitsburgh, Pennsylvania, where I grew up.
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Posted on Dec 02 2011 08:36 AM
This conversation reminds me of something my dad told me. Dad started making records when performances were recorded live on a concert hall stage. If someone made a mistake, they all played the entire movement again. These records were as good as the orchestra could play, and the musicians loved making records because they really got to play their best. Everyone took pride in their concert hall because it had good acoustics and made good records.
When Andre Previn took over he instituted the modern recording techniques he learned making movie sound-tracks. One section of the orchestra played one measure, often one bar by itself, as often as necessary until it sounded the way Previn wanted. Then on to the next short segment, orchestra section by section (sometimes instrument by instrument) until it was over. Then post-production took over, perfecting tempo and eliminating the various artifacts that come with real people playing real instruments. The orchestra didn't play anything. They had no sense of accomplishment or pride in their performance; there wasn't one. The musians hated it. It was a nerve-wracking grind.
What had been something everyone looked forward to became a dreaded chore. It also became something that was never actually played and could never be performed on stage.
Here's a question. Is a guitar a computer input device or a musical instrument?
— This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got.
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caddady
Joined: Feb 14, 2010
Posts: 802
N.E. Ohio
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Posted on Dec 02 2011 09:07 AM
Andre Previn was a dick.
Hey there is a song title there for some punk band.
And today aguitar is both input device and a musical instrument. Plus a tool for craftsmen and a prop for stage and screen, and object of desire and a thing to be hated (ask my wife).
— http://www.reverbnation.com/thegreasemonkeyz
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aqualadius
Joined: Aug 30, 2010
Posts: 414
Charlotte, NC
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Posted on Dec 02 2011 02:35 PM
We did our first 7" on a tascam 2 track reel to reel with 2 SM57's plugged directly into it and hung from the ceiling of our friends basement. That's always been one of my most favorite things about the surf genre as it doesn't matter really about the quality of the recording to me. But just having the technology available seems to me to be enough of a reason to explore it to it's fullest. It is possible that someday someone will find something that does sound better given the rapid advancement of recording tools.
I actually just got my first exposure to Melodyne and that is just craziness.
— Jeremy
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