
Posted on Mar 09 2025 12:30 AM
I’ve done some one man band recording, but I find it hard to feed off of my own energy, playing against myself on other tracks. Music is an emotional process and the energy of a group of musicians can be palpable. One of the things which I feel hinders music, these days, is that DAWs have made it feasible to collaborate with people you’ll never meet, not to mention work with in the same studio, in real time.
A few years back, I did some recordings with very limited gear; a four track interface. We recorded with two mic’s on the drums, and the guitar and bass directly into the interface, to get a basic track. I actually sang, off mic’, which helped me and the bassist. After the basic rhythm track, we could add more tracks, but we were able to record the foundation of the track, essentially, live.
But there’s an upside to Chiba’s approach. For one thing, you have more control and you don’t have to worry about one person taking over the song. You don’t have to convey the parts to various players, and if you know the song inside and out, you can probably avoid botched takes.
The most recent thing I recorded was a Surf tune I wrote, mostly for the purpose of having something I could use, royalty free. I used the canned drums on my recorder, which is adequate for this purpose, and started laying down tracks, guitar, Bass VI, Bass.
The bass laid down a very basic track, roots and fives, in the lowest register possible, and striving to stay out of the way. The VI mostly played a simple counterpoint to the melody, except for the second 32 bar go around, where it took the lead. The guitar led off the melody, played a sharp rhythm part during the Bass VI’s time in the sun. Played an improvised solo on the third 32, then brought it home on the final 32.
Other than a poor job on the last mix, it came out sounding better than I had any right to expect. Somehow, the energy was OK. So I guess that in my personal experience, it can be made to work either way, but I sure like it when I can record live with other players.
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The artist formerly known as: Synchro
When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar.