Why would you use a professional recording studio?
There are a vast number of recordings, many of
reasonable quality, being produced in garden sheds, bedrooms, basements,
whilst on the train, in the bus station waiting for a bus and in, dare
I say it, recording studios.
There are project studios and medium‑sized studios,
and then there are big, luxury spaces like Metropolis, Air, Abbey Road
and Kore. But why would you go to the expense of using the
top‑notch studios when you can build your own home studio in the living
room for a couple of thousand pounds? Some say that all you need is
a laptop and some decent software to get a professional result, but how
many tracks recorded at home end up as successful downloads on Amazon or
iTunes? Yes, there are a few, but the majority of the music on your
iPod has come out of pro studios.
There is also a consensus of opinion among recording
professionals that quality recordings can only be made in studios where
the equipment is of the highest standard. The Neumann M149, and its
cousin, the U87 are highly revered, and few pro studios would be caught
dead without a vintage collection of mics and a C12 to capture that
golden vocal. But how important is the crème de la crème of the
equipment world to the end product, in reality? Well, there are examples
of artists that only use SM58s for vocals. This is a mic that costs
less than £100, but has been part of the equipment arsenal used in the
making of multi‑platinum recordings of artists like U2 or Bonnie Raitt.
There are also those that swear by the latest developments from
Universal Audio, or extol the virtues of Massenberg EQs and
fashion‑conscious microphones with interesting colour names and
cool-looking shapes.
Ultimately, though, it's not the equipment itself
that makes the recording, it's the people who use it and the quality of
the content. Yes, I've said it! The content! Remember that?
So where am I going with this? What does the
professional recording studio give you that the bedroom doesn't?
Essentially, an environment that removes all barriers from capturing the
ultimate recording. If you want to use expensive mics or record in 5.1
surround sound, you can. If you want to set up the full band and record
live, or record one part at a time, you can. You don't have to make
compromises. If you think the guitar sounds better when the amp is in
the toilet, you can do it or simulate it. Again, your choice.
If you record in your bedroom, you are compromising
rather than having the freedom of sonic expression. You are getting
around barriers, you are fudging it. Sometimes you do get great results,
but you are limiting your choices. Some would argue that this is a good
thing, that you have to deal with the limitations, and that your
solutions contribute to the integrity of the recording. But experience
shows that if you remove those barriers, you open up the creative
pathways, and new and wonderful things happen as a result. So someone
can suggest that you can stick a backwards guitar through an overdriven
compressor and send it to another amp which is recorded with ambient
mics. Not so easy to organise in the bedroom, but in the fully equipped
studio, you can try it.
I'm not saying that your initial recordings, writing,
thinking and arrangements shouldn't be done at home: the more you
prepare for the recording session, the less time you will waste on
getting things organised and the more time you will have for trying
ideas.
This of course, leads on to using experienced and
professional engineers and producers. You may know how to set up a mic
or record a grand piano, but you are there to capture the creative
performance and you don't need barriers to the creative process.
Engineers and producers can eliminate the barriers and you can be free
to create music.
So why use a professional recording studio? Answer:
creative freedom and a better flow of musical ideas. Now where's that
SM58?
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