Wednesday 29 June 2011

Rock Kent TV!

I now have a video feature on Rock Kent.com which you can view here: http://www.rockkent.com/2011/06/dan-lucas-interview-anchor-baby-recordings/ - it was filmed on Sunday June 26th, in the BOILING hot studio. As you can see, I look a bit hot and uncomfortable!

In other news, I did my first radio broadcast on Academy FM (105.9) on Monday, which will be a regular feature at 3pm every Monday! I will be talking about local music/the scene in depth so please listen out for it, I am aiming for it to be something that people find entertaining, as opposed to me just playing music by local bands. Although I will be doing this, it will feature a lot of discussion about music too!

Word has it that the Penthouse stuff is back from mastering (thanks Oz), I am picking up my copy tomorrow and can't wait to hear it!

Dan.

Sunday 26 June 2011

Forget the gear, WHO is recording you?!

Over the last 6 years I have not only recorded, produced and mixed possibly thousands of individual songs (which is what happens when you do it full time), but I have also had the pleasure/pain of mixing other peoples material, or advising 'established' recording engineers on recording/mixing things properly.

I have heard tracks recorded in a basement or garage on an 8 track tape recorder, Garageband, Audacity or Reaper - using one of two cheap mics, and they sound absolutely fantastic. And in contrast, I have heard recordings done at 'top' studios via nice Ameks, Calrecs and God forbid even an SSL Duality (£280,000 please) that sound like absolute s***!

I have a selection of work-experience students who believe that if they know the basics of recording, then all they need to do is go out and buy some ridiculously expensive mics and they will be rivaling the recordings and mixes of Kevin Shirley, Chris Lord-Alge and Jack Joseph Puig. Well, the answer to that is: OH NO YOU WON'T!

Recording and mixing starts with having a good set of ears. At my level I'm no Andy Wallace, but I have a lot of experience with recording and mixing, I have done my homework, and have enough of a good portfolio and requests from other engineers to warrant airing my views on the subject. So here they are:

YOU NEED A GOOD SET OF EARS! Reset the mix on your DAW so everything is at 0, and everything is in the middle. Can you balance the faders and pan them on a basic rock track so that each instrument sits roughly where it should be? If you balanced it so it's all guitars and no drums then you're screwed from the start, listen to Nimrod by Green Day at a low volume and see how loud the drums are! Same goes with the bass guitar!

If you can see/hear in your head the final product before or whilst you're tracking then you're off to a good start. If you can hear WHERE to go, then you can learn HOW to get there.

A good recording engineer knows how to make the best of what he's got. If you can't get a useable guitar/tom/snare sound out of an SM57 then it's not the mic that's the problem. An MD421, Heil PR30, 414, e604 is a lovely mic to have, but it won't save you if you don't know what you're doing.

A friend of mine gets fantastic recordings out of a MOTU 896HD, some mid-range mics/monitors and whatever rooms he can find to track in.

I guess the bottom line is: Don't be under the illusion that studios with expensive gear will make your recordings and mixes better!

This brings me to the next point:
Whenever a work experience pupil contacts me, I ask them to take a listen to my recordings - and if they like the sound of them I will teach them. Unfortunately, a lot of people see pictures of a nice studio and assume it would be a great place to learn/record/whatever, but again it all depends on the person working there.

Bands: If you book a studio, make sure that you have heard SEVERAL examples of work that has been recorded or mixed by your chosen producer/engineer. There are plenty of people who work in studios because they have the right qualifications, rather than being admitted to these posts backed up by a ton of great mixes and practical experience.

I would always say that learning the basics, and learning them WELL is the most important factor, who cares if you can name every mic that's ever been made?!

Wednesday 15 June 2011

Just when you think things were quiet...


...They pick up again, and that means a massive back-catalogue of stuff to mix. It also doesn't help that I've been ill for 10 days! Some of the females amongst you, if not ALL of you, will call it 'man flu'. I can assure you it's not, I never get ill, and this was bad!

Anyway, I'm back now - back in existence under the dark, slimey underbelly of the local music scene, and I have some more bands to tell you about:

Folkestone-based 4 piece Blaise Paisel came up to the studio last Saturday to lay down a new song - I am in the process of mixing it, and once it's done I will be sending it off to Pink Floyd man Andy Jackson for a lovely mastering job, expect to hear it on my website soon!

Sunday saw Magnets (3 of) and myself descend upon SPACE gallery in Folkestone to record some drums and guitars for another song 'Horses' on the new EP. I'm surprised we got away with it to be honest, the drums were SO loud and the Sunday-shoppers would definitely have heard them from right down Rendezvous Street! You can see a picture at the top of Andy giving his drum tracks the 'all clear'.

On Monday of this week I recorded an amazing band called ATM. They sound a bit like Pele, but with vocals and a little heavier! I will be mixing that record (3 tracks) over the next couple of days and will DEFINITELY be posting one of the tracks up on the website soon!

Friday of this week I will be the subject of a video interview for Rock-Kent.com - this will be a general feature on me as a producer/musician. Cool!

Don't forget, I have a list on my website of other services I offer within music. If you'd like to hire me as a producer but already have an engineer then please get in touch, or if you'd like tuition/my mixing skills etc. Have a read!