I had an email from a subscriber
recently, and I'm embarrassed to say I can't remember
his name because these days unless I write things
down, nothing gets done or remembered. It's my age
you know. Anyway, he asked me if I had any tips
on recording solo guitar as he had recently been
doing so and was having a hard time. He said "Everything
is just so exposed, I hear every note, fluff and
squeak, and it just sounds terrible and I had to
give up in the end".
This email struck a chord with
me because during the last few weeks I have been
finishing up my new beginners/intermediate guitar
course, 'Guitar Made Simple' and have been recording
all the audio examples here at my home studio. Now
I can tell you that for me, writing this course
and getting inside the head of someone who knows
nothing about guitar, I mean a total beginner, was
no small feat, because after playing guitar for
a good while, we naturally take things for granted.
Just to illustrate this further, years ago when
I gave private instruction, a lady once said to
me, "If I fret this note with my left hand
here, do I have to strike the same string with my
right hand?" This of course may be extreme,
but I can assure you that when someone has never
touched a guitar in their life, it can indeed be
rocket science to them, so teaching needs to be
done carefully and attentively during a student's
early stages. And so my audio examples in the first
part of this course needed to be played very slowly
and explained articulately.
So I'm recording these audio examples,
and I find that because many of them are played
on the acoustic guitar, solo, with nothing but a
little reverb to make me sound better, recording
say four notes very slowly in isolation, is unbelievably
hard! Just to play a two octave scale, at say metronome
mark 60 evenly and cleanly is extremely challenging.
Now, because it's my guitar course
I'm writing, I can hardly give up can I? and the
truth is that what is acceptable to me and what
is acceptable to anyone reading through the course
may well be two different things, but for my own
horribly anal and perfectionist nature, I simply
HAD to get these little examples to sound as good
as I personally could. Even to play one simple chord
in isolation with the fingers, where all the notes
came through evenly, where the attack of the chord
sounded absolutely right, well that was quite an
issue too. Not to mention microphone noise and technical
issues to get the level right and so on. I would
brush the pickguard of my guitar ever so lightly
and I would hear it in the recording, and naturally
it was unacceptable and had to be re-recorded. And
breathing? Well forget it! OK - a little drama here,
but you know what I mean. The damn mike picks up
absolutely everything. Oh for a drummer to soak
everything up!
Have I gone mad you ask? Well
no, and I thought I had too, but I put this whole
experience down to well, just that - experience.
I was a professional session guitarist for years,
having played on TV shows, albums and now a recording
artist with five albums to my name, so why on earth
was this so difficult?? But I honestly hadn't recorded
anything so difficult in a long time! Oddly, the
process got easier as the examples got more challenging.
Anytime I got to layer an instrument, the recording
went just that little bit quicker because it wasn't
so exposed.
I have recorded quite a lot of
solo guitar in the past, but music that had a beginning,
middle and end and one could get into a 'performance'
state of mind, and at comfortable tempos. These
little isolated examples were difficult because
so many of them had to be played so slowly, and
at the end of the day I can't recommend that students
run before they can walk.
So what advice do I have to impart?
Well first I can now highly recommend that if you
think you have good time, if you think you know
how to play cleanly and evenly, know how to stop
individual strings ringing on when they need to
be muted while playing others, know how to project
each note at the same volume as the next, then I
urge you to play a G major scale, solo acoustic
at metronome mark 60 and listen back to yourself.
And a better microphone may just make things worse
because you'll only hear more!
Is this advice or instilling fear
into you? Well it may be the latter and I do apologize,
but only because I may not actually have any real
advice other than just do it. I believe that if
your ears are open, what you hear back from your
recording should tell you what you need to work
on.
Here's the good news...
Do we really want to be robots?
Do we actually want to have a quantize button attached
to our guitars? Do we want to be that serious and
intense? I think the answer is no. This is why most
of us are more attracted to humans playing music
than machines. Music should push and pull, it should
ebb and flow and shortcomings are often the character
in one's playing, to an extent. We need to just
relax and play.
But if you are to record your
acoustic guitar solo, you will no doubt come face
to face with certain issues that I did, and my subscriber
friend did also. All I can suggest is this; First,
don't give up, but understand that one needs to
surmount a problem to the level of personal acceptance.
In other words, if it sounds good to you that's
OK, provided you are pushing yourself and striving
for your personal best. Now, that template will
probably change as you grow as a musician and what
was acceptable then may not be now.
All I can say is, however
you feel about this stuff, and whatever level you're
at, recording yourself playing solo acoustic guitar
very very slowly is just bloody good practice!