Why
do we need?
Who
gives a damn?
Well
if you want to know how to communicate with your artist and build up a friendship
that will make him or her come back and create more tracks/albums/EP. The
artist will care especially and he could tell all his other friends that are
musicians that he or she has recommended you.
What
I am doing in this blog is to help your readers understand the basics and tell
you why its important to know at least what the musician is talking about or
better yet to help him improve.
What
if the musician is singing to fast or to slow? You could suggest him to sing
faster by telling him “oh can we try singing the verse in quarter notes or sixteenth
notes?” or slow as in “Hey how about we try the intro in half notes?” or one
words could take up four seconds which is a whole note/bar.
You
can’t get everything in one take. Let’s face it. Whenever you’re making music
or recording something your ask yourself. “This sounds great” but then you ask
someone to listen to it especially other Audio majors they will tell you’re the
truth and say that something is off or this part is to fast or to slow. Then
you start losing their attention because of it. Don’t be sad about it because
if something is wrong then that means something needs to be improved in order
to make sound better.
We
audio majors are one big mission to make our listeners enjoy what we have
created. I have always wondered why some bands take like about a year or 2
years for one album or an EP. They want their music to sound perfect or well-adjusted
for listener to buy/download and end up going to concerts or buying merch.
What
would you do? Would you release your music when you finished recording everything
or would you rather wait until your music is ready?
I agree with your approach to it. You should want to spend as much time as possible on the track because it can only be released once unless you remix it.
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