Recording a demo with a Four Track

This is little article I found that I thought would be useful to anyone or anyband out there whose looking to make a demo, and how you can use a simple 4-track to the best extent.

Four Play

If you already own a four-track machine, you'll be pleased to hear that it is possible to record an acceptable-sounding demo tape on it. I've heard plenty of clear, powerful demos that were done on four tracks. But, before trying to make yours, you should either get a book on recording techniques or get some advice, because recording an actual band on a four-track is a difficult thing to do well. Let me explain: you've only got four tracks to work with and, on many machines, you can only record on two at any one time. As a result, you may have to record several things at once--like, for example, the whole drum kit on one track and the rhythm guitar and bass together on another. You're obviously going to have to make sure that the relative balance of the instruments is perfect. If the bass ends up being too quiet relative to the guitar, or the cymbals are too loud compared to the rest of the kit, you're not going to be able to "fix it in the mix."

To Bounce or Not to Bounce

It is possible to bounce tracks together on a four-track, but the more you do it, the more you're going to diminish sound quality. As a general rule, bouncing should be kept to a minimum. Having said that, all those great-sounding Beatles records were recorded with a four-track (it's all that was available at the time), and they bounced tracks like crazy. You can get good at anything, providing you work on it enough.

Less is More

You're not going to have much opportunity to do guitar and vocal overdubs on a four-track. But that's okay: it's best to keep things simple for a demo. To do it right, you're going to need at least two decent mikes. I recommend a Shure SM-57 for instruments and an SM-58 for vocals. These are the same high-quality mikes used by the pros, and you can get them for about 100 bucks each. As for the space, your rehearsal space should do just fine.

Shop Around

If you own a four-track machine but what I've said thus far sounds like too much of a hassle, you might want to record your demo at a cheap 8- or 16-track studio. Inexpensive ADAT (digital 8-track recorder) studios are popping up all over the place so you should be able to find one through your local music entertainment paper. There are always ads for cheap recording places on the bulletin board at your local music or record store, so check them out, too.

Be Prepared

Before booking time in a studio, make sure your whole band knows the songs you intend to record and can play them together as a band. Even the cheapest recording studio known to man is an expensive place to rehearse in. What you don't want to do is get there, set up, start recording and then suddenly realize that someone doesn't have his or her shit together. Treat your recording session like a gig: make sure your guitars have new strings on them and that everyone has spares of stuff that might break or need to be replaced: strings, batteries (believe me, there's nothing worse than trying to find a 9-volt at 3:30 in the morning), guitar cables, amp fuses, spare tubes, drum sticks and drum heads. Even if there is a music store near the studio you're using, you don't want to pay for studio time while someone runs out to get whatever it is you need to continue. If you're recording late at night or on a Sunday, the store probably won't be open anyway. Recording studios charge you by the hour, regardless of whether you 're recording or not.


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E-mail me at yu108056@yorku.ca

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