Tag Archives: recording

The making of an album: 2nd and 3rd studio sessions

My little band Thornfield has been BUSY! Saturday May 5th we headed into Handwritten Recording for our second studio session.

Just like the previous time, we got in around 12:15 to set up, tune up and warm up for a 1pm start time, and went ’til 7pm.

However, the experience was vastly different than our first session.

And I mean vastly different, in case you didn’t catch those bold letters.

You’ll probably remember that our first session was all about getting the basic tracks, with piano, guitar and drums playing at the same time, and the extra person singing what’s called ‘scratch vocals’ in the other room–not the keeper vocals, but just a guideline to keep all the musicians together. We were insanely efficient and on the ball, and our engineer said that it was the most productive session he’d ever worked.

Well, in this case . . . second verse, not the same as the first.

(But that’s okay)

The highlight of this session was bringing in some friends of ours: Jon Lin came in armed with his cello to track 5 songs . . . (here he is warming up)

. . . and the musical genius Graham Nelson came in with his mouth harp to track 4 songs.

Go Graham go!

Eric was practically drooling over Graham’s performance (and Carrie was feeling the love too). This guy knows his way around a mouth harp, and there’s no denying it.

Our friend Peter/Petras also had a bunch of bass tracks to lay down (and we can’t thank this guy enough for all his hard work).

So unlike the first session, in which we all played at the same time, aimed to get 2 clean takes of each song and then moved on, this session was much more repetitive.

Carrie would track the lead vocals for a song our friends were joining us on–for example, Scarecrow.

(accompanied by her constant friend: a cup of Throat Coat, the best tea ever for vocalists)

Then, this same song had to be tracked again later for Jon, with a couple takes to get it right.

Then, even later, Graham tracked the same song, a couple times, until he got a take he was pleased with.

Then, Peter tracked it too.

So it wasn’t “play a song and move on.” It was play a song . . . play it again . . . play it again . . . and play it one more time, with each person adding their bit one by one.

And please let me emphasize: this isn’t a problem–this is exactly what was slated to happen. Our friends did a fantastic job (truly, truly). The cello and bass and mouth harp are indispensable to the sound of these songs, and we are so, so happy they volunteered their time and energy and talent.

But . . . it felt slow. For Eric, Carrie and me, there was a lot of time just sitting on the couch listening to what was being recorded–and not just chillaxing, but listening carefully so that we could give feedback, encouragement, and our opinion on when a clean, keepable take had been achieved, and when there may have been a few measures that needed to be re-recorded and punched in.

So for us 3: a lot of sitting still while maintaining that focused attention on the music that was happening.

It was exhausting! And in an entirely different way than the first time. The first session was like getting high and injected with 5 doses of delicious caffeine, and using that crazed energy to run a marathon that you ended up winning.

(and this session may have felt like this for Jon, who–having never recorded before–went from uncertain to triumphant over the course of the afternoon)

For me however, this session was more like getting injected with caffeine but then being strapped down and unable to use that energy up in a satisfying way. It was productive . . . but felt unproductive. It was great . . . but didn’t feel great. I know the results were awesome . . . but I felt strangely deflated and useless by the end.

Besides tracking the guitar for Sunrise, re-tracking the guitar for Pierced Through, and tracking lead vocals for Denali and Green Wheat (more about that later on, hee hee), I sat on the couch. And sat some more.

And then a little more.

Anyway, I hope this isn’t a downer–the recording process is still going great. I just want to keep it real about how it felt going through the experience.

After the second session was over, as we were packing up our instruments, we booked a few hours for Thursday night with our engineer, wanting to get some more work done before Carrie headed off to a friend’s wedding and was off the radar for a bit.

And our Thursday night session (5-9pm) was–surprise, surprise–completely different again. It was just the 3 of us–me, Eric and Carrie–and it was fun. And productive. And felt productive. We were efficient, honest with each other, and tracked a ton of vocals, harmonies, and diddly extras. And after those 4 hours, I didn’t feel totally beat up from exhaustion either.

Our next (and hopefully last) session will be on Sunday May 27th. There’s a lot left to do: fiddly bits like tambourine, egg shaker and djembe, extras like melodica and triangle, a few remaining lead vocals and some harmonies–but the end is, for the first time, in sight.

Of course, recording isn’t the final step. Mixing, artwork for the CD, administrative stuff to get ourselves on itunes, copyrighting, etc. is still ahead–but hey. One step at a time . . .

. . . right?

Our 1st studio session: 10 things about recording

So as you all know, Saturday April 21st my band Thornfield (joined by Petras on drums) went to the studio. We had no professional recording studio experience and didn’t know exactly what to expect for the day, but we headed in with snacks, wine, tea, coffee, and instruments. And (unfortunately for me) a dry-clean only sweater that I proceeded to completely sweat through about 5 minutes before even arriving. And my outfit totally didn’t work without the sweater, so I couldn’t exactly remove it either (ugh! I hate being trapped by my own clothing selection!). Note for next time: wear layered, easily removable, non-dry-clean-only items.

I just wanted to toss a few things out there before we head into our second (and possibly final? possibly not?) session at the studio this coming Saturday. What was it like? What the heck did we do? Who, what, why, where, when?

Well, our band headed into Handwritten Recording at 12:15pm to tune up, warm up, and set up, with a start time of 1pm with our engineer, Rick. We fiddled with our guitars/piano/drums, sang annoyingly loud scales and vocal swoops by the bathroom, set up our big fat music binders, removed everything from the recording room (instrument cases, coats, purses) that wasn’t necessary, tested mics–and before we knew it, it was time to roll.

And now, onto bullet points–they save me the effort of making connective sentences. Thank you for understanding.

1. I really like our engineer. He was joking with us, super friendly, encouraging while honest, and focused on efficiency. I can’t imagine an experience working with an engineer we didn’t get along with–ack. So if you’re recording, find someone you like! Find someone whose personality meshes with yours, because you’re going to spend some intense hours with this person.

(Also, I found it inspiring that–shameless name-dropping alert–Rick has worked with Sufjan Stevens. He has a letter from Sufjan posted on the back wall–how awesome is that.)

2. We did all “basic tracks” for this first session. In other words: guitars, drums, piano. All the voice stuff and extras (cello, harmonica, bass, melodica, guitar riffs, egg shaker, tambourine, djembe, vocals, etc.) will come later. The reason: this is a one-room studio, and with everyone playing at once you’re bound to get “bleed” when you play multiple instruments simultaneously–sounds from the piano leaking into the guitar mic, the drum leaking into the piano mic, etc. So we wanted to save anything fiddly (like vocals, which we’re bound to be very picky about) or non-essential extras for an overdub track during the second recording session.

Also, on some songs we multi-task–and Petras can’t play the drums and the bass at the same time, for example. So this necessitates an overdub anyway. Though if he could just figure out how to pull that off . . .

Still confused on why we didn’t belt it out at the same time? Well, if we had tried to do vocals during the basic track part, not only would there be possibly unpleasant bleed into the vocal mic (which allows for less manipulation on the back end), but if someone isn’t pleased with how they sang that one silly word on the second chorus, the whole band would have to play the whole darn song again, from the top. Saving the vocals means that once we’re singing, there’s less pressure to get a perfect take the whole way through, and if we sing a couple takes and like different chunks of each, we can more easily pick sections we liked and ‘punch in’ other sections from another take.

This sounds really confusing, doesn’t it?

Hmmmm.

Anyway!

3. So the thing you’ve probably gathered about basic tracking: if you mess up, everyone starts again. I was afraid the pressure for this would completely wig me out and cause my fingers to become miserably wobbly and useless on the guitar–but it didn’t! Turns out I am MUCH less nervous in a studio setting than I am live. Go figure.

4. I learned a new term–‘scratch vocals.’ The gist is, if you’re recording a basic track and no one is singing, it’s very likely that people will get lost and confused. You really need that voice singing along to indicate to everyone where they heck you are in the song–like Carrie is doing here:

So for every song, someone sat out (I did this an awful lot), hung out by the mixer, and sang into a mic which played into everyone’s headphones.

5. Fig newtons can do wonders for restoring ones’ energies.

6. It’s easier to get it done all at once. Our end time was technically 6pm, but Rick suggested that we stay longer to get in the last 3 songs. Basically, it was better to just get it done while we had the set up already configured than to set it all up again in that same way the next time.

7. Getting in the groove takes time–but no panic needed! We started our session with the basic track for “Trust Me to Stay.” This is one of our oldest songs, and probably the song which we have performed the most. I felt confident that we could get two clean takes back to back (yes, our goal was to nail 2 clean takes of everything). HOWEVER–surprise surprise, it took us close to an hour to get this dang track right. An hour. At this point we were tempted to freak out, because if it took us an hour to get every song right, 19 songs (enough for 1 album + 1 EP) were bound to take us . . . well, twice our budgeted studio hours just for basic tracking. BUT we didn’t lose it (thank God), and everything seemed to go waaay fast from there on out. We got clean takes of the second song (Dinosaur) almost right off the bat (go Eric and Peter!), and so forth. Once we got into our groove, we were just spewing out clean takes right and left. It was gratifying, energizing, and Rick actually couldn’t believe it. =)

8. I suspect the 2nd session will go more slowly. I just have this feeling. We have a lot of extras to add. I suspect a 3rd session might have to happen . . . but we’ll see. Either way, I’m not sweating it.

9. Fast. It happens fast–and has to. If someone messes up irreparably and stops the group, you wait 5 seconds, count everyone in, and start again asap. Losing minutes between takes could be so easy–but we all kept each other on task. From the moment we started at 1 until we walked out after 7, it was practically non-stop. Except for the time it took to chew a Fig Newton . . . or three.

This is my justification for the ridiculously few pictures. I thought I’d have all this time to be snapping artistic shots of everyone right and left, but it turns out that there just wasn’t time to pick up the camera, take a picture, and set it down again. I’ll try harder during our second session.

10. I loved it. I love my fellow musicians, I love making music with them, I love seeing and hearing us succeed in this venture that seemed so intimidating, I love the crazy energy that comes even when exhaustion is shooting through your brain. Kind of like the surge of caffeine during an all-night cross-country drive. Your brain is mush, but somehow your body just keeps going. And it feels . . . good. Like a drug.

To all of you who said a prayer on our behalf–thank you! We were truly blessed during this first session, and I can’t wait for session #2!! (keep praying!)