|
|
|
|
|
|
#159834 - 06/25/06 05:54 AM
Using an arranger as "the band" for recording projects
|
Senior Member
Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 2206
Loc: Louisiana, USA
|
Say you are an indie recording artist and will produce your own records. Is there any arranger you think is superior for this? For songs where you need more than guitar/vocal. To produce as high a quality recording as is possible without hiring other musicians. And I don't mean recording "live," I mean multi-tracking.
It would be interesting to do a studio demo with, say, a five-piece band and also do it with an arranger and see just how different the two are.
I guess an exception could be made if DRUMS or BASS are the key to making a demo sound "real." If a drummer could add that, it would be worth it. Of course, he'd have to be able to play to the perfect time of the arranger tracks. Arrangers lay down a decent bass line, I would think drums would make more of a difference.
I have produced two CD's myself. And I knew NOTHING about recording. I'm not very good at anything. But I have sold many of these CD's, have had many terrific comments and not one person has griped about the music. They think it sounds good. I did it all on a psr2000. Well, that and me on acoustic guitar.
I hear things on there that I go "ouch" but that could be fixed if I had better equipment. (Like, more polyphony.) And more knowledge.
Just wondering if anyone has any strong thoughts about what would be ideal.
------------------ Bill Yamaha PSR2000
_________________________
~ ~ ~ Bill
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#159837 - 06/25/06 09:03 AM
Re: Using an arranger as "the band" for recording projects
|
Senior Member
Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 2206
Loc: Louisiana, USA
|
Originally posted by DonM: Bill, You should talk to Dean and maybe go visit his studio near Monroe. Nobody knows any more about the Nashville recording industry that he does. I'd like to do that but this question doesn't have as much to do with doing top-flight demo's as it does the general question about what model arranger gives you the most for recording outstanding recordings to sell CD's. Put it this way... I'm amazed at what the lowly psr2000 does. I love music and think I have a really good ear but heck, it sounds pretty good to me. Sure, I'd love to spend $3,000 or more per song in studio. But I'm not rich anymore, haha. As for Nashville, I am not aware of any successful songwriters pitching songs recorded on arranger but if there are some, I sure want to know about it! Most demo's are full-scale recording projects done in studios. Occasionally, I hear of guitar/vocal but almost always, that is an established, very successful and connected songwriter doing that. It's not like the old days. That's my take on it, anyway. But again, this question isn't about Nashville demo's. ------------------ Bill Yamaha PSR2000
_________________________
~ ~ ~ Bill
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|