Recording Session Checklist (LO1, LO3)

With my recording sessions with the band on the 31st of March and 1st of April approaching, I’m going to bullet point a few key techniques I’ve discovered in my research that I’m going to try in the sessions. They regard the recording of drums and vocals.

Drums:

  • Recording with a microphone on the hi-hat and ride cymbal. This is mentioned in my previous blog post and is something I want to try, in order to get a rounded sound of the whole drum kit.
  • Record toms with a condenser mic. I will try using a a C414 on the rack tom(s) during the session which is something that both Butch Vig and Chris Sheldon do. I will, however use an AKG D112 for the floor tom, as I prefer to have a lot of low end in that particular drum.
  • Record snare with SM57s. Again, both Vig and Sheldon prefer this mic for snares, and it’s what I personally have always used. The top mic will be 1 inch from the head, as Sheldon recommends.
  • D112 on the kick drum. Fairly standard, and this is what Sheldon recommends.
  • Use a lot of C414s. Flood, who produced 1979, used a lot of C414s to get an ‘up front and aggressive’ sound. I’ve booked 6 of these mics.

Vocals

  • Record vocals with a Shure SM58. While there are higher quality and more expensive microphones that I could use, I’ve found that both Gil Norton and Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins favour them for recording vocals. If I decide the sound isn’t quite what I want in the session I’ll use a different mic.
  • Double track lead vocal parts. As done by Butch Vig on Nevermind. Should time constraints allow me, I’d like to try this technique to add power to the vocals.
  • Multiple backing vocal takes. As done on 1979. This is to add space to the tracks and I personally think backing vocals are one of the most important aspects of any track.

Recording with hi-hat and ride microphones (LO1)

Recording with a microphone on the hi-hat and the ride cymbal is something that is recommended by Chris Sheldon, who produced the three Biffy Clyro tracks in my influences playlist, but is something that I have not really done in my last few drum recording sessions. Given that my first learning outcome is to improve on the quality of my drum recordings compared to previous projects, I feel that this would be a useful thing to try, to bring out each element of the drum kit in a balanced way.

Hi-Hats: According to Cobalt Audio (link at the bottom of this entry), “there isn’t really a huge downside to putting a hi-hat mic up, as you can always choose to not use it if the mix works without it. The big advantage of having a dedicated hi-hat mic is that it gives you much more control over four areas; tone, volume, closeness and localisation.” In previous recordings I’ve done, often the hi-hat hasn’t properly been been picked up by the overheads and so I want the option of having a dedicated hi-hat track there if I need it. In terms of microphone choice, Cobalt maintains that “the tone you get from a close hi-hat mic is likely to have a weightier sound to it compared to the sizzly high-end on the overheads. This can make the hi-hat too overpowering and dominant in the mix, so eq carefully to compensate. The choice of microphone will change the tone too; small diaphragm condensers like the km84 and AKG 451 are studio favourites because of their bright top end response, and for a slightly softer sound then the reliable SM57 works well.” I personally have always had good experiences using SM57s on whatever I use them on and could try using one for the hi-hats on this project. It’s more likely that I’ll use an AKG C1000s for both hi-hat and ride cymbal however, due to their reputation as perfect for those particular cymbals. The C1000 is a condenser mic unlike the SM57 so is perhaps more suited to picking up nuance on cymbals.

In terms of placement, Cobalt notes that “generally you will find that you use the mic to anchor the hi-hat in the stereo image without bringing up the volume much or making it any closer. Placing the mic a little further away than usual will help with this, as it will have a bit more ambience and spill from the drums which makes the hi-hat sound less intrusive. In the region of six to eight inches from the hi-hat is a useful starting place, unless you want a really close, clean and defined sound in which case two inches from the rim and two inches up, aimed straight down at the hat works as a general rule of thumb.”

Ride: Using a dedicated microphone for the ride cymbal is not an especially common practice but I do want to try it when recording YCIALM in order to get as much from the drum kit as I can. I’m probably going to use a C1000 to record the ride as I believe it’s the best mic for the job in this case.

In an Audio-Technica blog (link at the bottom), they claim that the best place to put the ride microphone is “about midway between the edge and the bell on the outside half of the cymbal. Keeping the mic close to the cymbal will minimize the bleed from the rest of the kit, but getting too close can cause excessive low-end to build up. Remember, this mic just augments the overheads, so we need attack and definition more than body. Your overheads are picking up the low-end body already. Moving the mic closer to the bell will add more ping. Moving it to the edge will emphasize the overtones.” I need to make sure the microphone is pointing away from the snare drum, hi-hats, and toms in order to minimize unwanted bleed.
It’s fairly likely I won’t use the ride mic recordings in the final mixes of this project but it’s important for me to have the option. I want to get the absolute best recordings I possibly can and using extra microphones is of no detriment to the project and can only be a positive.

http://johnlsayers.com/Recmanual/Images/hihat.gif

http://johnlsayers.com/Recmanual/Images/hihat.gif

http://www.cobaltaudio.com/recording-the-hi-hat/

http://blog.audio-technica.com/2-drum-mic-tips-recording-ride-cymbal/

Gil Norton (Pixies – Wave of Mutilation) – LO1, LO2, LO3, LO4

While it has been easy to find academic writing about the Pixies’ cult album ‘Doolittle’, it has been difficult to filter it down to finding information about the production of the album and Wave of Mutilation.

On the other hand, finding information about the man who produced it, Gil Norton, has been easier. Gil has worked with Foo Fighters, Feeder and Echo and the Bunnymen.

Some of the information I can find out about Norton regards my 4th learning objective (liaise with the client in a professional and well-communicated manner, to ensure total client satisfaction.) (LO4) He says that the first thing he does when working as the producer on an album is to “try to have a conversation with a band before I meet them. I normally get demos and I like to get the band talking about the songs they’ve got and what they think I can do for them.” “Next, you go through the arrangements of the songs, listening to the demo and the arrangements that might work” (Roland.co.uk). While the band I am recording have arrangement ideas of their own, they will be sending me demos prior to the recording date so that I know exactly what I’ll be recording. I have already had a conversation with YCIALM’s drummer, Alex, to find out exactly what the band wants from the album. They actually want demos of each of their new tracks but he mentioned that they are open to keeping my versions as their own should they be of high quality. This is a really good motivation for myself to make sure I record and mix the EP to the absolute best of my ability. “For me pre-production is the most important part of the recording process. It’s where you pull it all together, talk about the songs and get to know each other. I like to know the dynamic of the band and the sound in pre-production so everyone is relaxed when we go to record. So many bands have never done it – but how can you go into a studio if you don’t already have the songs organised?”
Pre-production is something that I’ve had a chance to do a lot of on this project so that I can go into the studio on recording day knowing exactly how the session should go. I will be adding a production plan to this blog at a later date along with a list of recording techniques that I have researched thus far that I intend to use in the session.

“Recording anything is always a challenge, it’s a leap of faith for everybody. That’s why pre-production is so important.”

Norton notes the importance of keeping your client happy when recording by using the example of Black Francis while recording Doolittle; “He was difficult, yeah! It’s not that he won’t do anything more than once, but he would find it boring playing the same chords over. I had to try and convince him to repeat sections, or change things around a bit to keep him happy.”

“I believe anyone can learn how to mic up or understand what a compressor does, but in a closed environment you have to get on with people. They have to like you and want to spend time with you. Some people don’t make bands comfortable and from those engineers, I learned you have to know when to push people and when to back off and let them make their own mistakes. You also have to be able to push without it being confrontational. I’m still learning, like in life, how to get the best out of people.”

In terms of microphone choice, when asked which mic he would choose if he was only allowed to have one and he said, “An SM58”. That’s genius as it’s totally the only mic you would need. “Realistically, you can do nearly anything with a [Shure] SM58. It’s such a great workhorse. It sounds great in front of a guitar cab, on snare drums, for vocals… It’s got a great top end and doesn’t feedback. They’re fairly inexpensive, great quality, capture most sounds you might want to capture and, if you’re young and wanting to learn about recording, you can drop them and they still work.” An SM58 is a microphone I have been thinking about using to record vocals so for him to back this up makes that choice easier. The SM58, as mentioned in my post “1979 – Vocals”, was also used to capture the vocals on 1979, one of the tracks in my influences playlist.

 

http://www.musicradar.com/news/tech/gil-norton-lists-his-favourite-studio-gear-586433

http://www.roland.co.uk/blog/gil-norton-interview-adventures-in-production/

Butch Vig – More Drums (LO1/ LO2)

A Music Radar article online entitled “Butch Vig’s drum recording secrets” sheds some light on the ways that Butch Vig tends to record and mix drums on records that he produces.

Regarding the famous drum sound on Nevermind, Vig says that “drum sounds can be defined by a certain era and then frequently they sound dated when a style or fad moves into fashion. Just the way I recorded those drums was pretty standard. Miking kick and snare, overheads, toms and some room mics. Having said that the room we recorded that in at Sound City was amazing and part of it was that Dave Grohl is an incredible drummer. I think that helps it all sound fresh. I think it’s a great sounding rock record and his drumming is incredible.” This is a contrast to how Chris Sheldon mics up a kit, using several microphones on toms and sparing no expense in terms of tracks recorded.

Vig also notes the importance of the room that you record in. “It depends on the kind of vibe you’re going for. Drums really give the listener a sense of where a song has been recorded and where it’s taking place. If you have guitars, bass and drums and put on a huge room-y drum sound with lots of reverb it’s going to sound like it was recorded in an arena. If you mute those and just put in a tiny kick and snare that’s very dry with no reverb it’s going to sound like it was recorded in your bedroom.” The Multitrack at the uni has quite a dead room sound and so I will keep in mind when I record the other instruments that I should try to match that lack of ambience in order to make it sound consistent. Butch Vig goes further with this, claiming that “”the decision making process of how you record the drums and how much equalisation and ambience and compression and whatever you put on them defines the space of where the listener perceives the song is. It’s powerful when you realise you can radically change how a listener is going to perceive a song.”

“Sometimes I’ll use a 57 on a snare, sometimes I’ll use a condenser, an AKG41, I might use a ribbon mic on a snare especially if there’s a lot of hi hat bleed.” Here, Vig notes that like Chris Sheldon, he too has a tendency to record drums predominantly with condenser mics. I will definitely be experimenting with this at the recording stage. “I have a tendency to like condenser mics on drummers that don’t hit the cymbals real loud, and if they do hit them loud I like to use ribbon mics because they’re softer in the top end.” Again, Vig agrees here with Sheldon, stating that he often records with one room mic, and favours heavy compression as a stylistic choice. “Sometimes I’ll record with stereo ambient mics, sometimes I’ll just put up one and try to compress it out of a preamp really hard or run it through an effects pedal to give it a vibe. I’ll run the drums to some sort of stereo compression and then really hammer it.” This contradicts some of what I have previously read about Butch Vig’s drum techniques earlier in this project.

In terms of mixing, when choosing where to position each drum track in the mix, Vig notes “with room mics I’ll try to move them around so when you bring them up in the mix you can see the space the drums are in. With toms I usually pan left and right. I don’t usually pan them hard left and hard right. I like to get it so it make sense as if you’ve got a drummer playing ten feet in front of you.” I’ll take this into account when recording drums.

In terms of mixing I am certain at this point that I will be adding compression and EQ after recording, as this is the way I have always done it and I believe it is what works best. I also think it is more practical this way and allows for greater choice. My recording session with the band on April 1st is going to be very tight in terms of having enough time to do everything and so I will do everything I can post-recording.

http://www.musicradar.com/news/drums/butch-vigs-drum-recording-secrets-586463