| 10 Questions Before Recording
Your Album
By Brandon
Drury
1)Why Are You Recording Your Album?
There are a number of reasons that a person would want to record
an album. Some musicians have had songs laying around for years
and would just like to slap them down onto some kind of repeatable
device such as a cd. Others are looking to capture their latest
batch of songs and hopefully intend to sell it. Others are simply
looking for a demo. You need to look at your situation and see what
you intend to do with it. This will effect many other aspects of
the recording process.
2)What Are Your Goals for Your Album?
Are you hoping to get signed based on the songs on this album?
Are you looking to make money off of the album without the help
of a label? Are you just wanting to record the record for yourself?
3)Do you really need to record an entire album?
I get a lot of bands who want to record a $200 album and they want
it to sound just like their favorite band who spent $200,000 recording
their last record. Frankly, it's impossible to get the same sound
at 1/ 1000 of the budget. It's just not going to happen. It takes
time to make a great record that will compete with major label big
boy bands. Even great musicians take a week to do drums or a week
to do vocals (Sometimes much longer) in the major label setting.
Are you sure you want to cram vocals in the last 3 hours on Sunday
night?
I always recommend that bands on a very tight budget cut their
song quantity down. Chances are that not all of these songs are
great anyway. For most bands, you are better off recording your
best material and giving yourself plenty of time to work on it.
Think about it. If you really want to come out with a perfect record
(which many people do) how is this possible without perfect songs?
Your perfectionism (if you believe in perfect) should start before
you walk through the studio door.
4)What are you expectations for the record in terms of quality
and perfection?
You need to have clear goals of what you would like to achieve
with your record in terms of how professional it sounds and looks.
Again, your budget will play a huge part into the quality and perfection
factor of the record. To sound great, you need great musicians,
playing great performances of great songs on great gear. That's
basically it. If any of these things are present, you are compromising.
Be realistic. Odds are strong that if you are a 16 year old in a
rock band, your record simply won't sound as good as the band that
has 10 years of experience over you.
5)In any less than mega pro setting, compromises will I have to
make?
I'm talking about on a recording quality level. For example, I'm
limited to 20 inputs on my recording system. (Two Delta 1010 soundcards
and two Mytek ADC 96s). When a drummer want to use 4 toms and 2
kick drums (and expects them to be close mic'd) I'm already using
up 6 mics on the kicks and toms. By the time I put 2 mics on the
snare and two overheads, I'm up to 10 mics. I always like to try
putting a mic in front of the drum kit and also farther back as
a room mic. However, when I know I'm going to need to a couple tracks
for bass (DI and mic'd amp) and a couple mics on each guitar cabinet,
I have to start rationing my microphones. In other words, I've had
to compromise what I'm doing because a drummer decided to use an
extra tom or two and extra kick drum. Those two tracks could have
went to tracks that would have seriously improved the entire drum
sound immensely, but instead went to a tom that will be hit 3 times
on the album.
Be aware of this and go easy on the recording guy. The more junk
you add on your kit, the harder it is to get right. Since most drummers
do not balance their kit properly, most things have to be close
mic'd. This is unfortunate because it usually reduces sound quality
to make up for the drummers lack of playing.
6)How does your drummer sound?
Sit and listen to your favorite records. Then listen to your drummer
play. In almost every rock record ever made the snare and kick drum
cut through the mix easily. You can hear them clear as day and there
are not a ton of washing cymbals drowning everything else out. How
does your drummer sound? Does he smash his snare or is it lost in
a wash of hihats, rides, and crash cymbals?
If your ears don't pick up the snare and kick as they should be,
no microphone will either. It's up to your drummer to play his kit
in a way that sounds good. About 20% of the drummers that I've seen
naturally do this. Most have to learn to do it.
7)What is your plan for after the record is complete?
If you don't have a marketing plan made out before the record is
even started, you've already messed up. Guess what. No one has every
cared about an album that they never heard of...ever! If you don't
have a plan to make sure that everyone in your county has heard
your album, how do you expect to sell any to the people that will
actually like it? Marketing an album is beyond the scope of this
article, but if you don't have a clear cut plan for getting this
album to the people, you will probably fail. Note: Playing a few
shows and putting the cd in local music stores is not nearly good
enough.
8)Have you thought about graphics?
Graphics are usually not cheap unless you have a talented buddy.
You need at least 300 dpi graphics ready for the printer's specs.
While the instructions to do this are not difficult, most people
are clueless. If you are doing the graphics yourself, make sure
you understand exactly what your cd replicator needs from you.
If you are hiring a professional to take care of the graphics,
good. Make sure you save your money!
9)How many cds do you expect to sell with your newsletter?
In my opinion, if you don't have a large quantity of people on
the newsletter, you aren't ready for an album. The newsletter is
the most powerful way to promote your band without spending a dime
or much time. All you have to do is send out one email every 2-4
weeks.
So if you don't have a large newsletter already going, don't waste
your time on an expensive record. Go and record quick demos of each
song and save them for a rainy day. The newsletter thing is so powerful
and so easy to setup. If you don't have one, you probably have done
a poor job of promoting your band. You are simply not ready to record
a serious record.
10)What's the worst thing that could happen?
Let's say you go into debt recording the “perfect” record. You
then go into more debt creating the graphics and shelling out the
cash to pay for the cd replication. You throw your cd release party
and you sell 7 copies. 7 COPIES???? You haven't even paid for the
shipping on the cds yet? If you plan to make a great record, you
had better have a plan or you'll end up with 993 copies of the cd
in your basement and a huge credit card debt.
11)Should I use my money to impress a label?
Many bands are hoping to get signed. Great! If that's the case,
you need to realistically look at your situation. If you have the
budget to make a recording that sounds so good that the label doesn't
have to do re-record it, you will save money. Of course, most bands
can't afford the bucks it takes to do this. Hiring pro engineers
is not cheap in most instances. Pro mixing is even more expensive.
So you'll probably record with a studio that will give you results
less than that of a major label recording. If that's the case, you've
already compromised. You've already weakened a link in your chain.
No matter how perfect the vocal take was or how amazingly you played
the drums, the quality will be sub par.
In other words, if you are recording at a demo studio or project
studio, you are wasting your time if you go for monster perfection.
Labels are looking for great looking people to play extremely catchy
songs. Most producers are paid to shape you into a real musician
when the big bucks come. No matter how perfect of a record you think
you'll make on your own, a real producer will find flaws...lots
of them.
Brandon Drury has recorded too many albums for too many bands that
didn't take band
promotion into consideration.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brandon_Drury
|