
TheGreatGreen
Well-known member
The best "trick" I can give is to setup a decent, easy-to-press set of custom keybinds so when you mess up, you can do the old "stop, reset back to your mark, record again" flow without thinking about it. Hell, attach a foot pedal to your recording setup and use that if you can so you don't have to use a keyboard to do it, which requires resetting the positions of your hands with each take.
The goal is efficiency.
I can eventually print pretty much what's in my head to the track, but I'm definitely a 2-dozen take wonder most of the time, lol. Anything I can do to make the re-recording and overdubbing process as smooth and fast as possible ends up saving me a ton of time.
The goal is efficiency.
I can eventually print pretty much what's in my head to the track, but I'm definitely a 2-dozen take wonder most of the time, lol. Anything I can do to make the re-recording and overdubbing process as smooth and fast as possible ends up saving me a ton of time.
This hits on something really important too. If you can, try to setup your space so that there is as little activity between "idea" and "recorded track" as possible. Always have mics on your cabs. If you use IR's into FRFR speakers, instead of plugging it straight into speakers, route it so your IR loader is always plugged into your interface, and your interface is plugged into your FRFR speakers, so all it takes to save an idea is launching your DAW and hitting record.No tricks really. I’ll write a riff, figure out the bpm, lay down some drums to that bpm, record the guitars and bass and that’s really it. I have everything mic’d and set up where I don’t have to do anything but hit record.