Today, music studio software is so easily available that everyone and his dog is recording music.
And there's the problem. How do you keep a dog quiet when every time you start recording she starts barking? Yes, that means you. Don't look so innocent.
Alan Brookes wrote:Today, music studio software is so easily available that everyone and his dog is recording music.
And there's the problem. How do you keep a dog quiet when every time you start recording she starts barking? Yes, that means you. Don't look so innocent.
Maybe try keeping your dog distracted with snacks?
I don’t know.
Cute dog though.
James Quillian wrote:Personally I think a dog barking in the background is desirable for a home recording.
If, like me, you record all the instruments of the band yourself, one at a time, and then mix them down into stereo, eight channels with a dog barking on each of them might sound like it was recorded in a kennel.
Fortunately, I can feed the bass, electric guitars and steel directly into the mixer without a microphone, but the vocals, fiddle, dobro and mandolin are another thing....
Once I was recording a harmonica track, intended to capture the feel of a man walking the green mile to the gas chamber.
Hopi chimed in, howling; I left it in because it captured the mournfulness of the moment. Great studio dog.
Now I have another problem. The cat who sees me reading and sits on the book, sees me typing into the computer and insists on sitting on the keyboard, sees me recording and insists on walking across the mixing board, messing up the settings.