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I'm wondering what most groovin rock bands do when recording. do they use a metronome or not?

FAQ

Do all bands record with a click track?

Those that can make good use of a click track (metronome), don't need it, while the ones that need it the most, can't make use of it.

Comments

natural Mon, 12/06/2010 - 20:34

Funny thing about metronomes.
Those that can make good use of it, don't need it, while the ones that need it the most, can't make use of it.

It does help if there's going to be a good amount of overdubbing. Also helps in punching in basic tracks.
But ultimately, it's what the band feels comfortable with.

dvdhawk Mon, 12/06/2010 - 21:08

natural, post: 358350 wrote: Funny thing about metronomes.
Those that can make good use of it, don't need it, while the ones that need it the most, can't make use of it.

Perfect. Truer words have never been spoken (written). Nobody can improve on natural's answer.

All I can do is agree. A rock band that is really groovin, already has a good timekeeper on the drums.

audiokid Mon, 12/06/2010 - 23:47

If you are wanting to sync to "goodies", which are some of the best kept secrets in commercial music, a click track (steady rhythm) in commercial music is a must. But that only make it easier for the mixing engineer, not impossible to sync.

Good musicians learn to play with a metronome early on in life so by the time they are professional, a metronome in a studio is never a hindrance.

Excellent quote.  Those that can make good use of it, don't need it, while the ones that need it the most, can't make use of it.   

Davedog Tue, 12/07/2010 - 00:27

natural, post: 358350 wrote: Funny thing about metronomes.
Those that can make good use of it, don't need it, while the ones that need it the most, can't make use of it.

It does help if there's going to be a good amount of overdubbing. Also helps in punching in basic tracks.
But ultimately, it's what the band feels comfortable with.

Excellent! Truer words were never spoken.

My regular drummer, The Hurk, loves the clik. It helps him relax into the groove and frees him to push or pull or sit right in the pocket according to what is needed.

The added benefit is when we record a lot, he plays better live.

Working with young players its imperitive that they learn the value of the clik. I find that its not so much just the meter being present but the TONE of the clik track having a benefit to them. The wrong type of sound as the clik can distract whereas the right sound for that particular person allows them to have it in their periferal hearing and makes it a part of their natural rhythm.

Always experiment with the tones available for a clik. Both Hurk and I like the side-stick on the shell of a drum sound. Its not as metalic as the rim-shot and is less ontrusive in a mix but it definate enough that you can concentrate on it, easily picking up the meter.

And has been mentioned, it makes for easy editing when theres a number to send to.

BobRogers Tue, 12/07/2010 - 04:59

I'll chime in with another emphatic agreement. But just to expand - A click track (that's the usual recording jargon for a metronome) makes life much easier for the recording engineer. It's much easier to mix a song that has been played to a click. The problem is that most bands are not good at playing to a click. (The studio musicians who get paid the biggest bucks can do this in their sleep - play to a click without much more that a lead sheet and sound like they are feeding off a live band.) It takes a lot of practice just to do it. It takes even more practice to do it well. The good thing is that learning to do it well will pay off big time in your live playing and your general ability to interact with a band.

As a practical matter, if a band comes in and can't play with a click you are better off doing some sort of "live in the studio" recording. If they can't play with a click, recording one track at a time is usually a mess. You have to experiment to find which member of the band has the most solid time, record that track, fix it, and have others use it as a reference (if they can).

vttom Tue, 12/07/2010 - 06:40

Thought I'd share this recent experience...

A couple of weeks ago the violin teach that my wife accompanies came in to record some tracks that she wanted to burn to CD and hand out to her students as a practice aid. One of the pieces was a canon. We recorded it with a metronome thinking that we could get by recording just 1 track, and making it into a canon by copy/pasting the 1 recorded track and sliding it to the right accordingly.

This was disastrous. Even though she seemed to have played with the metronome quite well, when we played the (shifted) tracks against each other, there were spots where stuff just totally did not line up.

We wound up having to make separate recordings of each part in the canon (while monitoring part 1), even though it was the exact same music!

thatjeffguy Tue, 12/07/2010 - 09:59

The biggest benefit of recording to a click comes in the editing stage. If you need to do any lateral copy & pasting (as opposed to vertical comping of takes) you will need the sections to sync up and this will only happen if they were recorded to a click.
Yes, it takes a great deal of practice to do this well, but as others have mentioned, the practice will improve your performance even outside of the studio.
The reason it is difficult is because following the click I think involves a whole other part of the brain than is required by playing your instrument. You need your brain to function in "split screen" mode to make it work.
I always discuss the pros & cons of recording to a click at the first meeting... to learn the level of their experience as well as to assess the requirements of the music. If we're doing a "live" recording where everybody plays at once and there is bleed between the tracks then there is little likelihood that lateral editing will be feasible = less need for a click.
For music where there are overdubs, and where most or all tracks were recorded discreetly (no bleed) then I will encourage the use of the click if the musicians are comfortable with it.
I usually use a hi-hat closing sound as it has a softer attack and is thus less likely to bleed out of the headphones and into the mic during quiet passages. Also, riding the click fader during tracking can prevent this type of problem, as well as pulling the click out entirely during say, a ritard at the end of the song.

Jeff

anonymous Tue, 12/07/2010 - 18:05

To me, it seems possible that some humans can have an innate sense of meter that is congruent with itself, but not with true mathematical time. Who could argue that many of the early bluesmen had rhythm, at a point in history when clicks were simply not used in recordings. Yet I would wager that if one were to analyze their rhythm, drifting and offtime could be rendered obvious. And yet some artists are able to push and pull far outside of convention, and not only make it work, but work well.

Admittedly, I gave up the idea of trying to record with a click a long time ago, after realizing that I did not get along well with it. I perform best -with maximum intensity- when I have the liberty of complete control over time, for good or bad. It could be evidence that I am just a middling guitar player, but I can live with that criticism. It could also be a sign of my inexperience in recording, and this of course is unarguable. :smile:

dvdhawk Tue, 12/07/2010 - 18:34

Davedog, post: 358372 wrote: I find that its not so much just the meter being present but the TONE of the clik track having a benefit to them. The wrong type of sound as the clik can distract whereas the right sound for that particular person allows them to have it in their periferal hearing and makes it a part of their natural rhythm.

I was lucky enough to sit in on a session a few years ago with a professional drummer who came up from MusicCity USA to record a rock album for a friend of mine. The singer/songwriter already had all the guitar tracks and vocals done to a drum machine and the live drums were nearly last. The drummer had the rough demo tracks a week or two ahead of time and showed up with the all the songs charted out, perfectly tuned drums, and his own high end Akia drum machine to drive his favorite percussion sounds - solely for his headphones. For a couple of the songs that just had click, he synced up a latin backbeat that never got printed. It gave him something to groove to that didn't compete with the feel of his kick and snare. Whatever he did, it worked for him, the results were great. His intensity was unbelievably high every time the red light came on for a day and half - and it elevated the whole album to a different level. Maybe it was the peppy latin beat that kept him from dragging by the end.

The best part of working with a monster drummer like that is the ability to punch in and seamlessly fix a measure. That level of effortless consistency in every splash and crash is so nice.

The older you get, the more you appreciate a truly great drummer.

audiokid Tue, 12/07/2010 - 19:05

Here is my take on it.

25 years ago I learned how important click tracks were if I was ever going to sync people together around modern technology.

Through thousand of hours in performing I experienced 2 types of musicians. Ones that don't accept click tracks and others that do. It is my solid belief that those who do not use a click track are unstable and seriously hindered because they are not able to allow others to lead. They are missing a huge bond and learn the wrong meaning of flexibility. A click track is often preceived as being to conforming so they rebel and miss mass growth as artists. Man, its such a big topic that I could write for hours on.
My greatest gift is having the ability to improvise. But, I cannot even get close to inspired if I hear messy and unreliable musicians that drift away from tempo (the "flow"). My tempo is so precise, I can leave a room and come back in 5 min and still be on track, yet I am on a magical journey that never leaves. When a song is flowing I am able to think way ahead, create leads, songs whatever thus, ability to see it coming before it happens. Timing is what makes great bands greater.
When I am performing, I expect this and need solid musicians around me that can hold it together without being effected by pushing and pulling and dynamics. I am able to trip and stumble effortlessly from 64'th to whole notes and fall right back in the pocket. Its what makes music sound more musical.

I'm not bragging here, just telling you what I expect and feed off of. Once you are where I am at, a click track isn't just a click track, it is a river flowing. It is very much organic and as critical as the seasons, day and night and so on.

I have a 12 year old daughter studying Royal Conservatory Piano. She is entering grade 9 this year and will have her ARCT before 16. She uses a click track all the time and she is far from able to groove. She is blowing people away because she has learned the secret to improvisation and feel. I am passing this onto her that was passed onto me by my mother who was a Metropolitan Opera singer.
Bottom line... Timing is everything. Timing is the bond.

I'm with davedog on the sound. I use a sidestick as a click track and often a bass drum. The sound of the click track all depends on what style of music you are doing.

A big topic that reaches way out there but always comes back home. Thats the magic of a click track.

JohnTodd Tue, 12/07/2010 - 19:14

As a one-man-band, I have to use a click track. Even my MIDI drum tracks go down to a click. Not needed, but still there because I use so many syncopated rhythms that I get confused while tracking new material.

And my ADL-600 contest entry "Choir of Angels" was recorded to a click, even though it is "rubato" free-time. Listen carefully and you can hear the click bleed through the cans a little (gasp!!!).

So a click track can be used for many different things.

kmetal Tue, 12/07/2010 - 22:32

Great posts to an ongoing topic guys. The Rolling Stones recorded in one members' mansions' basement, w/ dirt floors. (2010 issue of guitar world). If they used a click, they ignored it. They are the #1 band that gets brought up to me in 'click disscussions'. The fact that they 'drifted' tempo didn't hurt their sales.
I recently assisted on a 'live studio' session w/ a band who's drummer was lacking a steady tempo. Next, we tried a click for four takes, he ignored it, and it made the song worse. Then we did takes w/ out it (again). It seemed that the band had the ability to keep up w/ the drummer's tempo variances, delivering a natural ('out of time') perfomance. We editited the best intro, into the best take, and called it a night. The energy was there. Overdubbing the rythym section would have been a nightmare. (thank you live recording)
I personally have gotten better at rythym guitar because of a click, even if my final takes aren't "right on". It gives me a good guideline. I use the beep, w/ an accentuated '1' beat.
I think that certain types of music merit a click more than others. Pop u gotta be on, as there are soo many sync'd sounds. Jazz, blues, if you get the feel, little variences can add flavor. Classical, well what would Beethoven say about tempo drift? <- (insert insults here)
Sometimes the band hearing themselves out of tempo on the cd, is enough to get them to work harder.

Big K Wed, 12/08/2010 - 08:06

During the last years I had more and more bands in for recording who thought Ti Ming is a Chinese canton in the south.
They could not play the songs live together and a quick try showed that none of them found a way to cope with the drummers up and down... So I did coaching sessions with the drummers and the bass players to get them used to play to the click.
Without click the whole project would have ended in desaster... As usual, the musicians were all much tighter when playing together and were buffled about great impact those little teamplay lessons had when performing live on stage, afterwards.

My bottom line: give them a chance to see that it is not working w/o click or be pleasently surprised by their performance as a band. Help them to accept the click track as a friend and guide rather then their enemy. There is still plenty to correct when mixing. They will never become machine-like tight player, not even with a click, anyhow. Usually, there is enough human feel left.

Btw, have you ever experienced that when getting close to the end of recording the click was the only "musician" that sounded untight??

Good drummers... omg, ... please send them to me... lol ...
There aren't many. What you get is loud 'n fast with a lousy tuned set, but the good ones are so rare...
:-(

jwrightnl Wed, 12/08/2010 - 10:02

i agree being able to play with a metronome is key to a good recording musician.

we have no problem recording to or playing with a metronome. i just feel that sometimes when we record to it it kind of takes away from the human characteristics of it and almost makes it sound a little like a machine. maybe its just me.

do most professional bands record with a click or not?

TheJackAttack Wed, 12/08/2010 - 10:51

Most professionals have found the way that transcends playing to a metronome or similar time keeper. In a symphony orchestra there is a metronome standing at the front. Is it rock steady like a little box or click track? No, but the importance of being with the Schwachkopf mit baton is required and STILL making music at the same time. Trust me when I say the conductor is often much more distracting to making music than a metronome. This is just as true for jazz or rock or musicians.

Rhythm and Pitch are the two most important things within music. Everything else hangs upon this structure. Through dynamics and articulation it is very possible to give the ILLUSION of bending time. The best musicians accomplish this through intuition or training or both.

BobRogers Wed, 12/08/2010 - 11:10

jwrightnl, post: 358462 wrote: i agree being able to play with a metronome is key to a good recording musician.

we have no problem recording to or playing with a metronome. i just feel that sometimes when we record to it it kind of takes away from the human characteristics of it and almost makes it sound a little like a machine. maybe its just me.

do most professional bands record with a click or not?

I haven't taken a survey, but from what I've read most mainstream commercial pop music is recorded to a click.

Stage 1 of learning to play with the click sounds terrible, stage two sound good but stiff, stage three sounds great - it swings, grooves, rocks, etc. Keep at it, and proceed to stage three.

natural Wed, 12/08/2010 - 11:31

Well, now we get to the hair splitting part of our conversation.
Is there a difference between a metronome and a click track?

Metronomes are rigid- Although, professionals know how to play behind, on top of, and ahead of it to obtain the required feeling. But I would venture to say that Metronomes are only really useful as an educational tool. To help you perform a part faster and more accurately, not so much as a means of performance.
You don't paint with a ruler, you shouldn't perform music with one either. It's not natural, but it can be boring (just my opinion)

Click tracks OTOH don't need to be as rigid. -Most times, my clik tracks are planned out ahead of time. Complete with changes for time signatures, and especially tempo changes.
It can be as obvious as the choruses are at 110bpm while the rest of the song is at 105 bpm.
Or it can be a gradual change throughout the song, where it starts at 105bpm and gradually increases over time to the ending at 110bpm.

As mentioned earlier, Click tracks don't need to be just the tick tock of a metronome. They can be entire little percussion parts (again with tempo changes programed in ahead of time.) to which the performers can groove to.

Yeah, current pop music is performed to metronomes- Look how well that's working out.

TheJackAttack Wed, 12/08/2010 - 11:42

Metronomes can be programmed to be variable as well. Not the $5.95 music123 special of course. How is that any different than your description of a click track? If you are playing to artificial timing it is the same point in my opinion. I don't think there is any semantic difference.

There is often a heated debate in the so called "classical" world about rubato. Those that vaguely understand it think rubato means drastic tempo changes to generate "feeling" or "nuance." Those that understand rubato in its entirety know that it is often more felt than done and if tempo is adjusted, it is done in an organic fashion that returns to the original. Much like you're programmed "click track."

It really isn't any different to playing with dynamics. One could argue just as easily that since "everyone" compresses the crap out of every tune they "produce" or "master" then we shouldn't even bother putting dynamics in. Turn it to 11 and let 'er rip. Bad rhythm is even more jarring though, IMO of course.

Big K Wed, 12/08/2010 - 17:10

Any musician should be able to play ahead , on top or behind...
If he can't...well... musician is a great word for him then...

What we do is basically teaching them ( those who can't play right) the trade. That this happens more often in a studio is a bit of a drag.
I really would love to get paid for being coach, teacher, engineer, producer, texter, tuner, advisor, organizer, Wailing Wall, Shrink, mechanic, stealth musician and chorus singer ...you name it.

Chris and Bob said it all:
Timing and pitch rules and the abillity to play to the click and still be musical....
Getting through the 2 stages and end up in the third..you'll love it. As engineer and musician.
I have become a terrible studio musician, btw... :-(
I have no band I play in and I seem to kinda loose a bit the focus for playing just this very instrument I want to track. I have so much of the songs in the system that I have a hard time to play the same lines, repeatedly. But, I guess, it would come back quickly, though.

As for my internal click...It has been a pita for a while in the '80s. I could not stand untight playing and heard the instruments falling apart and comming back together again to such extend and precision that it became annoying to me. I am over that, now.. ;-)
The same with tuning. I can cope with the tuning compromise of guitars which cannot be tuned correctly for anything in the world ( unless: True Temperament - Fretting systems ).
But I hear it rather well if any instrument is off the slightest bit. It is, maybe, more a feel then a hear. Maybe like hairs on the under arm begin to raise a little and go flat again... Also when recording drums to the click. I don't listen to the click or drums as a tone or note. I kinda live in the gaps and intervals. I sense it as closer or wider valley between them. For the musicians it might look like a fell asleep, but the second the dudes drift off to far, they know, i wasn't...LOL...

Davedog Wed, 12/08/2010 - 19:43

I am one of those that can play in, behind, in front, upside down, with, without, compromised or not....

I STILL dont have patience for those who cannot and even less for those that dont want to learn to even when its obvious to even untrained ears......to whit: The singer who would always be flat on EVERY track attempted and would argue for HOURS (on the bands dime) that everyone else was wrong ...including the grand piano....finally all things considered, everyone gave up trying to get it right and the compromise was GETTING IT DONE......then several days after the final mix seeing his girlfriend in a grocery store and having her say to my face, "Why did you let him sing everything flat? It sounds bad....." Truth from even the chippy....

Since I still play live a lot, I havent lost the chops, though when I listen back to old recordings and hear what I played I cant for the life of me imagine I'd ever be able to duplicate that level of playing as when I was younger.....

anonymous Wed, 12/08/2010 - 20:04

I am a little confused by the strong consensus for a click track. I mean what is the general opinion of any music that was recorded without one, that is by every non-technical analysis without flaw and perfectly flowing?

My wild guess is that a significant amount of the best recorded music from say the 50's through to the 70's and perhaps later, was done without one, but I am willing to be corrected on this point. Does anyone know if the Beatles used one? And have I sufficiently diminished my chances at winning the ADL 600 by intimating that my entry will have been executed sans click? (lesson to self: keep trying to improve on the all important skill of knowing when to shut up :tongue:)

audiokid Wed, 12/08/2010 - 20:11

jmm22, post: 358511 wrote: And have I sufficiently diminished my chances at winning the ADL 600 by intimating that my entry will have been executed sans click? (lesson to self: keep trying to improve on the all important skill of knowing when to shut up :tongue:)

Excusing me as I push my way to the podium for a quick announcement :)

The ADL 600 contest is not about timing or sound. It is about spirit!

Carry on... audiokid leaves the building....

anonymous Wed, 12/08/2010 - 20:21

Ok. Thanks for the clarification. :biggrin:

I would readily concede that if an artist or band cannot present at least the illusion of perfect time, or deviate in a perfectly artistic, musical, and skillful manner, then they certainly need a click. I am also aware of the practicalities of real engineers who are continuously faced with the problem of musicians not keeping proper time, which is quite a different situation than with someone like me, who is by most reckoning, just hobbying, albeit with intent.

TheJackAttack Wed, 12/08/2010 - 20:49

Without kicking too many kids off my lawn, musicianship used to be much higher years ago in the rank and file. Also, click tracks were more common than you might think. Am I saying everyone used them? Nope.

My first studio session (playing) was in 1984 and there was a click track then. That wasn't hard to deal with. What was hard was learning to play with cans. Still don't like cans. I've done many many commercial sessions since then and sometimes there was a count off, sometimes there was a complete click track, sometimes a scratch track-and what is a scratch track if not a defacto click track, and sometimes there was a conductor. I've never played a professional session where there was nothing at all.

[And yes, JMM, I am aware that 1984 wasn't that long ago ;-) ]

Big K Thu, 12/09/2010 - 03:56

To David: Hell, I could not re-do my stuff from the '70s if my life depended on it, either...lol..

Hi JMM, I guess, as soon as you have to do dubb recording with less pro musicians it is a life safer to use a click track and a blessing when entering the editing stage.
For good musicians it is usually no problem, at all, to have a click at the side and for bands that are playing well together and are able to record the tracks together it is rarely needed. Timing variations will be part of their performance and when everybody follows the moods it is more then ok to waive the idea of a click. If it wasn't for the ever so tight budgets I'd love to let them play the songs for days.. ( which is not all that good for the feeling, though...) till they get it right.

As to older recordings... when I listen to my old records from the '60s, 70's... there is a load of productions from the very famous that would, today, never pass the producers desk because of the timing fluctuations. Sometimes, even sloppily tuned instruments did not matter. M2c, .. with all the stuff they took in, it might have been rather hard to get them any closer to perfection, anyhow.. ;-)

What a great time we live in: constantly flat singing artists can be easily helped with todays tools. The best: you can demo it to them and the rest of the band and let them decide to use the flat or the melodyned, corrected version. Just stay out of the line of fire, when the discussion starts.. Better,..use it and don't tell anybody...
;-)

BobRogers Thu, 12/09/2010 - 04:41

There's a big difference between the 50's-70's and now. Much more live music then. People played out all the time. Every high school dance, VFW hall social (several a week) had live music. Crappy bands could get several gigs a month. Good bands could play almost every night. Remember the stories of the Beatles in Hamburg? Coming out of Liverpool they were terrible. Played eight hours a night six days a week in Hamburg for over a year. After that they were good. Where are you going to get 3,000 hours of live performance experience? If you can't, playing to a click is a good substitute.

JohnTodd Thu, 12/09/2010 - 04:47

jmm22, post: 358511 wrote: . Does anyone know if the Beatles used one?

The Beatles often made de-facto click track in the form of drum or percussion loops. They started that in 1965. Many times they'd make a loop to record everything to, then nix the loop in favor of Ringo overdubbing the drums. Worked for them.

anonymous Thu, 12/09/2010 - 08:56

JohnTodd, post: 358539 wrote: The Beatles often made de-facto click track in the form of drum or percussion loops. They started that in 1965. Many times they'd make a loop to record everything to, then nix the loop in favor of Ringo overdubbing the drums. Worked for them.

Hmmm... I must admit that something did not ring quite right with that answer, because my sketchy memory told me otherwise, so I went hunting. I found this quote from Ringo Starr, posted by someone in a related thread on Paul Mccartney's website forum:

A quote from Ringo in 1984 suggested that, at least at that time, Paul did.

"No drummer can hold the beat perfectly throughout the whole song. Listen to The Beatles' records. There's a little bit of speeding up and a little bit of slowing down, but the band is all doing it together. There's nothing wrong with it. It's a natural thing. We're not machines, we're human beings. With Paul [McCartney] now, it's a click track all the time, because he wants it perfect. I'm not putting him down for using one, but we never had a click track, The Beatles that is, and we didn't do so bad." - Max Weinberg, The Big Beat: Conversations with Rock's Greatest Drummers (Contemporary Books, 1984).

[[url=http://[/URL]="http://maccaboard.d…"]paulmccartney.com :: View topic - DOES MACCA USE "CLICK TRACK"[/]="http://maccaboard.d…"]paulmccartney.com :: View topic - DOES MACCA USE "CLICK TRACK"[/]

anonymous Thu, 12/09/2010 - 09:22

I have to respectfully disagree with how one might interpret John's response to the simple question of whether the Beatles used a click track. A drum loop clearly cannot speed up or slow down as is evident in the Beatles music according to Mr. Starr. He is unequivocal, no click track, pseudo or otherwise. I have to trust a direct quote from the very best possible source of this information, from one of the makers who set all benchmarks for recorded music before I would trust anyone else's conjecture.

BobRogers Thu, 12/09/2010 - 10:50

If you think the Beatles are the best source of information about their own band then (a) you don't remember the '60's and (b) you didn't read or see Anthology (known widely as "Mythology.")

On the other hand, I'm with jmm22 that a reference drum track doesn't count as a click track. Ringo had very solid time and feel for the groove of the songs, but he wasn't a click. Maca is using modern DAWs, horizontal editing, hired gun side men. Of course, he's using a click now.

TheJackAttack Thu, 12/09/2010 - 11:10

jmm22, post: 358569 wrote: I was two when the sixties closed, and the only thing I remember from then was sticking my finger in a lamp that had the bulb removed. :tongue:

Now that's funny, I don't care who you are! Mine was at age 11 when I crossed some connections on a tube amplifier with my index finger. Burned down to the bone and I still have a scar. I didn't experiment less with taking things apart but I sure was more careful after that!

SunDaze Thu, 12/09/2010 - 13:44

conspiracy theory

I cant listen to more than a few minutes of todays commercial music pumped on the country or pop tv channels
because it sounds the sameness . The timing is all perfect and leaves zilch to your imagination to fill in any gaps.
There seems to be nothing spiritual or meaningful about most of these songs and the click track probably is
the only glue eventhough the playing is of the highest standard when it comes to technique and tuning.

For me , I celebrate being human when I listen to some music that is not in perfect time or tuning ( limitations of course) and the glue is more the enthusiasm and love in the playing the song.

Please dont let the BOTS take over.....lol

anonymous Tue, 12/21/2010 - 15:09

jmm22, post: 358405 wrote: To me, it seems possible that some humans can have an innate sense of meter that is congruent with itself, but not with true mathematical time. Who could argue that many of the early bluesmen had rhythm, at a point in history when clicks were simply not used in recordings. Yet I would wager that if one were to analyze their rhythm, drifting and offtime could be rendered obvious. And yet some artists are able to push and pull far outside of convention, and not only make it work, but work well.

Admittedly, I gave up the idea of trying to record with a click a long time ago, after realizing that I did not get along well with it. I perform best -with maximum intensity- when I have the liberty of complete control over time, for good or bad. It could be evidence that I am just a middling guitar player, but I can live with that criticism. It could also be a sign of my inexperience in recording, and this of course is unarguable. :smile:

Well, I have to eat my words. In attempting to record my first song (technically my second, as I self recorded one a few years ago, on my old Firebox) I found using the drum track indispensible. So my ADL 600 song will indeed be submitted with the click of sorts. :tongue:

Link555 Tue, 12/21/2010 - 15:55

My experience leads me to the same conclusions. People that can't play to click are fearful it will make there music sterile, while people that can play to click find frees them up to nail the groove.

The last few sessions I have been doing are with a singer songwriter that can not stand the click, and a band that loves it. I had some decent hired guns on bass and drums to help flush out the tunes. Luckily I had the HPA for the live recording, It allowed him to kill the click in the songwriters cans, and feed it to the drummer and bass player. Not sure what I would have done before I had it....

For me it's simple:
Whatever gets the best performance wins.

The last thing I want to do is cramp someones groove with a click.

mdb Thu, 12/23/2010 - 10:20

I know it has nothing to do with live sound, but when I record in the studio I'll put a shaker loop on a track and stretch it out for the length of the song. We all find it much easier to keep time with a solid shaker rhythm than a beep from an annoying metronome (as useful as they are).

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