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The Creative Side
Recording Diary - String
Theory Sessions
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Our songs are all
written, we've been practicing to get them as close to perfect
as we can, and rehearsals have gone well. It's time to get these
songs on a CD! After many delays, we're finally rolling.
We're recording
at Colorado
Sound, which is the premier recording facility in the state.
Grammy nominated and gold records have been recorded there, and
we have as our engineer one of the best guys around. Steve Avedis
has worked with the likes of Kenny Rogers, Tony Bennett (Gold
Record Awarded), Edwin McCain and NSYNC, to name just a few.
Joining us for this recording are two of the best rhythm section
musicians in Colorado: bassist Blake Eberhard and drummer/percussionist
Christian Teele. For starters, we booked the studio from 10 am
until 8 pm on Tuesday, March 8 and 9 am to 4 pm on Wednesday
the 9th.
March 8, 2005
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9:30 am - All
our gear is in the car for our two day camping trip to Colorado
Sound. We've brought food as well, so that we don't have to stop
for lunch right away. The recording studio is very comfortable.
There are comfy couches, a fridge, coffee maker with whole beans
and a grinder (very important!) and a plentiful candy dish. We
brought along fruit, cheese, and banana bread to provide protein
energy. When we get there Christian has already been there for
half an hour setting up his drums. Micing the drums takes a while,
because each drum gets its own mic. There are mics for the cymbals,
bass drum, snare, toms, and each one has to be placed so it picks
up the best sounds. |
As each one of us gets
there we set up our equipment and Steve gets to work figuring
out the best mic placement for each instrument. The type of microphone
as well as its placement affects the sound quality. Sometimes
it takes a long time to get this right, but Steve's got it down,
and we're ready to start recording after only a couple of hours.
| 11:30 am - Roll
tape (figuratively speaking, as we're recording digitally)! We
are approaching this recording differently than any of our other
recordings. What we've done previously is track each instrument
individually beginning with Tom's guitar tracks. Then we add
on top of that the rhythm section. When that's to everyone's
satisfaction Josie records the violin part. This time we want
to capture the energy of playing together, so we've decided to
record "live". Each of us is in a different room, so
that our parts are isolated. We can see each other through windows
so the communication of live performance is captured. If everybody
is happy with their performance but one of us makes a mistake
they can re-record their part without making everyone else do
their's over. |
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3:00 pm - Everything's
going really smoothly and we're having a great time. I thought
by now we would stop for a real meal, but everyone's running
on coffee, fruit, and banana bread so we decide to keep going.
Everyone is listening to what's going on through headphones.
Each song sounds a little different and we have to ask Steve
to make adjustments in our headphone mixes. When everyone is
comfortable we record. Our recording rhythm has settled into
one run through of each song to get the feel of it, then we record.
The first time is usually okay, but we always think maybe another
try will be better. Each time we are in agreement that the second
one is a keeper. Then we take off the headphones and go into
the control room to hear how it sounds through speakers. Each
of us writes down things we'd like to fix in our parts. We are
recording this digitally with ProTools, which is a recording
program on a computer. It kind of works like a word processing
document. If we don't like the sound of a part we can redo that
section, kind of like rewriting a sentence.
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We usually start
with Blake and he "punches in" (re-records a note or
a section as the track is replayed) any parts he doesn't like.
This can get really time consuming if you're working with people
who have to fix a lot of stuff. Studio time is not cheap, and
we're paying by the hour. Blake is terrific, and doesn't need
to fix much. Neither does Christian; I think he fixed one spot
all day. Tom does his guitar parts next. |
Another nifty trick that
we can do with ProTools is to copy and paste a section. If Tom
plays a section twice, but stumbles on one of them, we can copy
the good one and paste it over the stumble. Then Josie fixes
her spots, mostly with the auto-tune function. This is new since
we last recorded, and it's great! If a note is little out, the
computer finds where it's supposed to be, kind of like spell-check.
Like spell-check figuring out what word you meant to use, you
have to at least be close to the right note. If it's so bad that
the computer can't figure out what you meant it doesn't work.
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The new technology is great,
but you have to have a good product to begin with. Just like
a word processing program can help you make your writing be its
best, but it can't turn everything you write into Pulitzer material.
The recording industry has used methods like these before, but
digital technology makes it much easier and more accurate.
8:00 pm - We've gotten a good
start today, the rough tracks for five songs are done. Our goal
is to get the rhythm tracks done and then we can fix any violin
or guitar parts later if necessary.
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March 9, 2005
9:00 am - We're
back! Feels like we never left. After recording one more electric
violin song, it's on to the acoustic violin. Josie's violin is
very bright, and it takes Steve and Josie an hour and six microphones
to find the sound they like. Since everything else is still set
up from yesterday we can get going. We settle back into our work
rhythm quickly. Before we know it, it's 4:00 and our time's up.
We still have two songs to go, each song takes an average of
two hours to record.
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We knew that this
was just the beginning and that we'll have to come back a few
more times. We are scheduled to come back on March 28. In the
mean time, Tom will practice the lead guitar parts he wants to
overdub. Christian will record some percussion parts at his home
studio and we'll be able to upload it at Colorado Sound. Josie
and Tom will listen repeatedly to see if there's anything that
needs to be redone. |
Photos by Tom Carleno
and Josie Quick
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