Thursday, May 17, 2012

Recording Without Remorse With Tempest


First I want to apologize for not getting a new blog up sooner. Ive been behind on updating the blog, and I could have done better. Now that school is finally out and I have more time though, I'm super psyched to tell you about the brand new single Four Score Studio just recorded with the band Tempest. The album is titled Without Remorse. I have to start by saying that it was awesome working with Tempest and I look forward to doing more projects with them in the future. They are truly a dedicated group of guys who work very hard at what they love to do, which is writing and playing music! Many of you who have been following FSS may know that we have been working on this track for a long time, and there are many reasons for that. The biggest reason was that this was the first major track that FSS has produced and released. That meant it was the first chance I had to work on a track from beginning to end that wasn't for school and that used just my own gear, which was a big undertaking. I have to thank the guys from Tempest who were very understanding the whole time. Tempest approached me last November after they had seen one of my flyers on the Montana State University campus and said they were interested in recording a single with me and just seeing how it went. I was super excited and nervous at the same time. I had expected some of my first projects to be smaller recordings with one or two people, not taking on a whole band! To complete this project I knew the gear I had at the time (which was all of three microphones and an M-audio 4 I/O Interface) would not be enough to complete this project, and it turns out it wasn’t.

We started this project trying to record some scratch tracks of the bassist Levi Krutzfeldt and the lead guitar player Jackson Schreiber so that drummer Jarrett Payne would have a reference while he was recording. The first scratch track we did turned out to be unusable because of the recording location. Initially I has chosen Howard Hall at Montana State University, which is a concert hall, as the location for the scratch recording. This lead us to get a very boomy scratch and the timing was off, so when poor Jarrett tried to record with it for the first time the results were not what we had hoped. The disappointing scratch also had to do with the mic placements that I had chosen for Jarrett’s kit. 

Fortunately we were able to move locations before we recorded the drums for the first time. Tempest practices out of Bozeman near Four Corners in a stone cutter's facility at night when no one is there, and this turned out to be a perfect spot for recording. The walls of the inside of the building are covered in dead board to keep sound from spilling out, which helped to give us a big live-room sound without the roominess we had before. The other issue we had with the first drum recording was lack of I/O in my interface. For people who don’t do recording, I/O stands for Inputs and Outputs, and represents the number of microphones you can record at one time. On Jarrett’s kit we were trying to record 8 mics into 4 I/O. We had been doing this by running 6 of the mics into a mixer then mixing that down to 3 channels to make it all fit into my computer at one time. This lead to a problem where the mixer changed the sound of the mics we were recording and gave the overall drum sound a lower quality that we wanted. This also gave me a lot less mixing power at the computer because I had combined a whole bunch of the mics together and didn’t have control over them individually the way I had wanted. As a group we decided we were not happy with the first drum take and threw away what we had. We then made several changes to our set up and tried recording the scratch tracks again, followed by the drums. We had a lot of the same issues again however, and then decided to throw away the work we had been doing.

Knowing that something was going to have to change to get the recording we wanted, I started looking at replacing my M-Audio Fast Track Interface with something bigger, which I had already been thinking about doing. I ending up purchasing a MOTU 896 MK3 interface which gave us the 8I/O that we would need for recording the drums. It would also make anything else we recorded sound a lot better than the Fast Track. This was an awesome decision and I haven’t regretted it yet.

We then started over for a third time, recording just a scratch bass track and the drums, and it turned out the third time was the charm. We got a great-sounding drum kit that we were all super happy with and which we were finally able to continue recording. The rest of the recording went along pretty quickly. We followed drums by recording the lead guitar part, and then re-recorded the actual bass track in the song. We followed that with the backing guitar and then the guitar solo on the track. That left only the vocals of the talented Daniel Nelson, who also plays the backing guitar on the single. This took us a little longer due to a gap of spring break and again a room choice mistake on my part. We started trying to record vocals in one of the isolated practice rooms in Howard Hall, the Montana State music building. We were getting good recordings that were sounding nice and dead like a isolated booth, but we weren’t getting the takes that we wanted. We then decided to move the recording back out to Tempest's practice spot and again this did the trick. We were able to finish recording all the vocals in two more sessions and that finished up the recording of this track.

Mixing this track had a couple of little challenges but nothing that was to major to deal with. One of the only major challenges was trying to get the kick drum to cut through so many other tracks on this mix, and there were quite a few of them. The number of tracks we recorded with mics on this single came out to 56, and when you added in all the other tracks needed for mixing the different parts together the overall piece had a whopping 73 tracks! Anyone out there who records music can tell you that is quite a few tracks to sort though and remember! As a whole this project was a great learning experiment even though it was quite the journey over many months of let downs and victories. I had a blast working on this track with Tempest and I look forward to doing many more. Make sure to check out the track and all our hard work on their bandpage.

Alex Nusbaum (Head Engineer of Four Score Studios)