How to record music
Step 1: The Recording
Process
The process was much simpler than it is today. Entire
performances were recorded in single takes, sometimes with just 1 or 2 mics.
1-It allows engineers to mould and shape the sound of each
instrument independently of the others.
2-It allows each instrument in a song to be recorded one at a
time.
With this new method, it meant that one man could now do
alone, what used to require an entire team of engineers and musicians.
Here’s a general guideline of how it works:
1. Create a Track to Follow
The first step is creating some kind of guide for the other
instruments to follow along with.
2. Record the Rhythm Section
As any musician knows, the rhythm section is the foundation
of any song. When bands play together,
everyone follows the drums/bass.
3. Record the Harmonies
Depending on the song, that could mean adding rhythm guitar,
piano, synths, horns, etc.
With a basic chord progressions now in place, next it’s time
to…
4. Record the Melodies
After that, all that’s left is…
5. Add Colour
percussion fills
piano fills
sampled sound effects
Step 2: The Editing Process
audio editing explained
There will always be SOME mistakes that can and should be
fixed…
With the amazing editing tools now available in the
DAW’s (Digital Audio Workstation) of
today.
Typically, editing is made up of 5 common tasks:
With comping, you compare the duplicate takes of each track,
and select the best one. If you like,
you can even select best phrases from each take and combine them all into one
“frankenstein-take”.
With noise reduction, you cut all sounds before, after, and
in-between each section of audio where the instrument is playing.
This means removing:
To reduce noise further, you can add a high-pass
filter beneath the lower frequency range of non-bass instruments, to remove
rumbling sounds.
With time editing, you can fix off-beat notes, using
one of two methods:
There’s the “cut and paste” method, which works well on
percussive instruments.
Normally it’s used on vocals, but it also works well on most
melodic instruments.
Step 3: The Mixing Process
audio mixing explained
Once you’ve used these tools to craft your mix, and it
sounds great…
Before your song is ready to be mastered…
All tracks must be re-recorded down to a single stereo file…
Or “bounced“, as it’s commonly known.
Once that’s done, various mastering techniques are used to
put the finishing touches on your song…
So it sounds even better.
To put it simply, mastering is hard. And if you don’t know what you’re doing, you
can easily make things worse, rather than better.
So the question is…
Arrangement
Comping
Noise Reduction
Time Editing
Pitch Editing
With arrangement, you take an overall look at everything
you’ve done so far, to evaluate what works, and what doesn’t.
For example, you could:
delete entire tracks that don’t add value
cut out sections of
tracks that clutter the mix
move a section to a new part of the song
delete entire sections of the song altogether
background voices
amp hissing
footsteps
chair squeaks
breaths
or just dead air
There’s the “time-stretching“method, which works well on
almost all instruments.
With pitch editing, you can shift any sour note back
on-pitch, using Auto-Tune or any similar software.
So that about covers the Editing Process. Now on to the next phase…
Step 3: The Mixing Process
Once the tracks are arranged exactly as you like…
The next goal is to make them blend as one cohesive
unit…though the process of “mixing“.
While mixing is an art form in itself, and can be done in
many ways…
There are certain fundamental tasks that everyone does…
Common examples include:
Balancing Faders – which is done so that no
instrument sounds too loud or soft in relation to the others.
Panning – which gives each instrument it’s own space
in the stereo-image, much like each musician has his own space on-stage.
Equalization – which crafts a unique space in the
frequency spectrum for each instrument, so that no two sounds compete for the
same band of frequencies.
Compression – which levels out the dynamic range of
an instrument so each note is heard clearly, and the mix sounds louder as a
whole.
Reverb – which creates 3-dimensional space for the
mix, adding a sense of depth, and unifying the instruments under one
room-sound.
Automation – which allows you to change settings at
different points in the song, to give your mix a sense of movement.
It’s finally time for the last step…
S tep 4: The Mastering Process
audio mastering explained
Common techniques include:
Maximizing Loudness – through further compression and
limiting, so the average signal level over time is as high as possible, without
sacrificing too much dynamics.
Balancing Frequencies – through further EQ, and a
process known as multi-band compression, which can compress individual frequency
bands separately from the rest of the spectrum.
Stereo Widening – with a special plug-in designed to
add an additional sense of “width” to the higher frequencies in your mix.
Once everything sounds perfect, the track is converted to
its appropriate sample rate/bit depth.
For example, CD audio is 44.1 kHz/16 Bits.
DIY or Outsource?
That’s why it’s standard practice for mix engineers
outsource the work to a “mastering engineer“, rather than doing it themselves.
However…Good mastering engineers cost good money, which not everyone
has, or cares to spend.
Is mastering always necessary? Decades ago, when all studio recordings were intended for
sale, everything was mastered.
Today however…now that many amateur recordings are done
“just-because“…
Home studios will often do their own mastering, or skip it
entirely. And that’s fine.
If all you do is share your music with family and friends,
then who cares?
However…
If you want to record music professionally, or…
If you simply want your work to sound as good as it can… then go for Mastering!
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