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#16
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Music: Spotify, Bandcamp Videos: You Tube Channel Books: Hymns for Fingerstyle Guitar (std tuning), Christmas Carols for Fingerstyle Guitar (std tuning), A DADGAD Christmas, Alternate Tunings book Online Course: Alternate Tunings for Fingerstyle Guitar |
#17
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#18
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But better equipment will pick up more nuance... which includes echoes, flutter, bass buildup and other unwanted things. Thus the recommendation to treat your space first, then buy the spendy gear. |
#19
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Most of the time I'm recording Gee playing accordion and she's in what I call the print/scanning room in my photo studio. There are half a dozen panels of 703 on the walls plus some furni blankets over the Epson 9900 and drum scanner and it really sounds great in there. At one point we were getting a reflection off the flat file cabinets in there so I just leaned a couple of 703 panels up against them and the reflections were gone. And for most of what we're recording - for movie and tv soundtrack stuff, we don't want much room ambience anyway. Much better to have too little and have the composer/mixer add it back in as needed. Where I record myself in out in my "control room" as it were. Ha. We built five 4' x 6' rolling panels of the Owens Corning 703 4 inches thick, making a loose paneled in room, if you can call it that, keeping it more or less separated from the rest of the photo space with its eighteen foot tall ceilings and lots of reflective surfaces. I don't feel confined in the least in my little control room/recording area and Gee is more than fine recording in our little iso room previously described. There's a non squeak/creak wooden chair, a music stand, a great pair of Shure 1540 headphones and room enough for several mics, and since it's a room within a room, it's very quiet in there - about 30dbA or maybe 38dbC and while I can hear the L.A. Metro Expo Line from the main studio space, you can't hear it in the recording room or the many ambulances that are running up and down La Brea all day every day. All I know is that most of the time we get to record the queues at our place and what we're recording is at least as good and most of the time better than when they require her to be at their studios. That kinda validates what we're doing here as the proof really is in the audio quality. All of the tracks we're recording for soundtracks or other people's CD's or other project never have any effects on them but they are recorded most of the time with the tube mics and always through the previously mentioned UAD Neve pre-amp plug-in. It's really those two parts of the signal that have the biggest impact in my opinion, and when I've recorded with the Audio Technica's, which are great, they're missing the warmth of the tube in the mic. And the same with the pre-amp plug-in and when you combine those two together, it's really something. Now obviously when we're doing our own projects the tracks will get whatever is appropriate in terms of effects, but mostly some reverb where the UAD Capital Chambers is my favorite and some compression where it'll be the UAD Fairchild plug-in for warmth or the Fab Filter single or multi-band for a clean compressor. I also knew that if we were going to convince a lot of these film composers to let us record on our own that I was going to have to up the game both in equipment and my personal skills, but all of these folks are constantly telling us how great everything sounds and amazed how fast we can turn projects around. And it's not all fun and games. Some of these movie projects are insanely complex in terms of tempo changing all over the place and time signatures as well, making is so a lot of what we have to do is punching in two bars here and four or eight bars over there, or because so often they don't know how to write for accordion and forget that there are only 41 keys and not 88, that sometimes Gee has to re-write not the spot or more than a few times, play part of a queue on one instrument and finish off punching in with a different accordion that has a different range of notes or even pull out the super rare bass accordion.
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'47 000-18 '49 00-17 '91ish Deering Tele prototype '02 Goodall GC '20 Gibson Southern Jumbo Deering Maple Blossom '62 Danectro Longhorn Bass UAD Apollo x8p, Apollo Twin Genelec 8351B's Studio Monitors Genelec 7370A Sub Lauten Audio LT-386 |
#20
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#21
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I like to put them in this order: EQ > Saturation > Compression The reason being that I want to use an EQ to shape the tone to be what i want before I saturate it, and I want to compress after the saturation because the saturation will change the way a compressor reacts because saturation has a compression component to it. So this way the compressor works less & the initial transient shaping happens in the saturation. That said, I have reversed the EQ & saturation when it worked better that way. But I pretty much never put a saturator after a compressor.
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-Steve Too many acoustic & electric guitars, basses, mandolins, violins, dulcimers, trumpets & percussion instruments to list. |
#22
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I suspect you’ve never been in a good studio. It’s a freeing experience to not have a room fight you when you play. Never have have I thought to myself “this room sucks all my creativity”. On the other hand i have said “this room sucks! It’s too mushy.” Sorry, but that’s just not anywhere near true. A properly treated room is the best thing anyone who wants to record could do for themselves. Then, even a mediocre setup, will produce much better recordings.
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-Steve Too many acoustic & electric guitars, basses, mandolins, violins, dulcimers, trumpets & percussion instruments to list. |
#23
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#24
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#25
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I don't think this last response was aimed at me but it looks like we're finally going to do Gee's solo record project and will probably do it the way some of our musician friends are doing it here in L.A. Rehearse all the band tracks thoroughly before tracking and then spend two or three days tracking the band in a place like East-West in Hollywood or Sphere in Burbank, both top quality facilities with vintage Neve boards and a great mic collection, and if you go in on an off day or weekend the rates can be surprisingly affordable particularly when you're dealing with top quality musicians who don't have to do a million takes for each track.
Then if there are any overdubs needed we'll pick those up at the home studio, and then probably hire one of my music industry contacts to mix and master while I do the photography and graphic design and take care of the actual CD/LP production.
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'47 000-18 '49 00-17 '91ish Deering Tele prototype '02 Goodall GC '20 Gibson Southern Jumbo Deering Maple Blossom '62 Danectro Longhorn Bass UAD Apollo x8p, Apollo Twin Genelec 8351B's Studio Monitors Genelec 7370A Sub Lauten Audio LT-386 |
#26
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Goya g10, Yamaha CN525E, 10string classical, Babilon Lombard N, Ibanez GA5TCE Alvarez a700 F mandolin, Epiphone Mandobird Ovation 12 string 1515 Takamine F349, Takamine g340, Yamaha LL6M '78 Fender Strat Univox Ultra elec12string Lute 13 strings Gibson Les Paul Triumph Bass Piano, Keyboards, Controllers, Marimba, Dusty Strings harp |
#27
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This is a project that will happen next summer and fall, and while it does sound like work, I am so looking forward to it. This project is all original instrumental music based around accordion, steel drum and vibes that is mostly inspired by the late 1950's and early 1960's music of jazz accordion virtuoso Art Van Damme whose solos sound improvised but were actually written out note for note. Thankfully, it will all happen in stages so I hope I don't get overwhelmed, and being semi-retired, if that's what I am these days, will help a lot. My only requirement from her is to have executive producer title and to be able to play some guitar on at least one track.
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'47 000-18 '49 00-17 '91ish Deering Tele prototype '02 Goodall GC '20 Gibson Southern Jumbo Deering Maple Blossom '62 Danectro Longhorn Bass UAD Apollo x8p, Apollo Twin Genelec 8351B's Studio Monitors Genelec 7370A Sub Lauten Audio LT-386 |
#28
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-Steve Too many acoustic & electric guitars, basses, mandolins, violins, dulcimers, trumpets & percussion instruments to list. |
#29
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Well, Abbey Road was just barely treated and mostly with burlap hanging on the walls and flats. Read Geoff Emerick's book. Very enlightening. Almost as good as Al Schmitt's very good book.
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'47 000-18 '49 00-17 '91ish Deering Tele prototype '02 Goodall GC '20 Gibson Southern Jumbo Deering Maple Blossom '62 Danectro Longhorn Bass UAD Apollo x8p, Apollo Twin Genelec 8351B's Studio Monitors Genelec 7370A Sub Lauten Audio LT-386 |
#30
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I've read Geoff's book, and I've been there...and Air. Those rooms sound great.
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-Steve Too many acoustic & electric guitars, basses, mandolins, violins, dulcimers, trumpets & percussion instruments to list. |