Recording
When I created my first album, I had to use a professional recording
studio since computer recording wasn't yet up to the task (unlike today!) Once
the arrangement was good to go, I booked recording time at Gary Agresti's Sound
Studio in New Hampshire for nearly all the recording. He has many different
sound boards, some of which I like better than mine for some instruments. (One
of his sound boards had a killer oboe that I loved and used in Danny Boy; his
electronic drum kit had far more options.)
We did 24-track recording, which meant isolating the Cakewalk channels and
playing them a few at a time, often on their own tracks. This provides the most
flexibility for mixing the recording later; it produces a master tape that is
most like a recording of a live performance would have been. After all the
musical instrument tracks have been laid down, we did the vocal recording in the
traditional way.
Holding a headphone earpiece to one ear (keeping an ear free so I could hear
myself), Gary played back the accompaniment tracks while I sang the vocal. I
don't actually sing that well, so sometimes we would record an individual phrase
over and over until I got it right. After the primary vocal was done, I then (on
some songs) added a harmony (Danny Boy, Stranger in Paradise) or even a whole
choir (God's Promise, I Know You're Out There Somewhere). I think the most
voices I overdubbed was sixteen on I Know You're Out There Somewhere.
I told Gary that the sound I was going for was "a cross between Carpenters
and Village People"!
Once all the recording was completed, Gary mixed the 24 channels down to two
for stereo, adding reverb and other effects to provide what we hoped was the
optimal sound quality. When the mixes were done and we agreed on the result,
Gary uploaded them into his computer and burned them into a CD. That's the CD I
copied with my own CD burner, which I still use to create copies for sale or
gifts.
If I were going to release more than a couple of hundred copies, I could take
the original CD to a CD pressing factory, where they would churn out thousands
of copies, and even put them into the plastic crystals with professionally
printed covers and labels. The aggregate publishing cost would be about $0.70 a
copy.
Click here to hear the finished product: "Don't
Think I Can Take This".
How about today? Well, CD recording has reached professional levels. You
don't even have to buy an expensive microphone, because the computer can
equalize a microphone's output and make it perfect. You don't even need a
soundproof room, because the recording software can take a sample of the
background noise, and then remove it from the recording! |