7 Deadly Session Sins

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by Rich Tozzoli

GuitarThe ease and affordability of home recording technology has made it simple to produce music at your own pace, on your own terms, and on your own turf. But it has also left many players clueless when it comes time to move beyond the demo stage and enter a professional studio. If you are booking time in a pro facility soon, the guys behind the glass will thank you to mind these 7 Deadly Session Sins, each of which is nearly guaranteed to drive a recording engineer absolutely batty.

1. Arriving unprepared.
Unless you are Keith Richards and have an inexhaustible budget, coming unprepared is simply inexcusable (and often quite costly). Have your parts rehearsed ahead of time and know what results you want to achieve. Practicing the parts you intend to lay down is a simple but effective way to make sure the session flows smoothly. Before the session, think about the intented outcome: What exactly do you want to get done, and in what time frame? Have you done all you can do in advance to ensure the goals will be achieved?

2. Hanging your headphones on the mic stand.
Ouch. I can’t even count the small but meaningful pains I’ve had to deal with when clients hang their cans on the music stand or mic stand and then knock them off seconds later. Those 3- and 4-foot drops take their toll, and a busted pair of headphones can literally grind a session to a halt — and represent a significant replacement cost to the studio or engineer. When you’re between takes or a break, place the headphones on a table or even around the base of the mic stand on the floor. They are safer that way.

3. Halting the session to rethink your approach.
Engineers hate sitting behind the board while you rewrite on the spot — unless, of course, you’re paying them time-and-a-half for overtime. Try to record your practice (even on a handheld voice recorder or iPhone) to make sure you like what you hear before heading to the studio. You can then play that rough cut for the engineer to help him/her understand what you’re going for. More importantly, it helps you hear the parts and make any changes ahead of time.

4. A poorly packed gig bag.
Don’t leave for the session without spare strings, picks and batteries. Neither should you expect the studio to have capos or guitar straps or even a spare tuner. Even when your guitar is strung with fresh strings, bing extras of the exact gauge and brand you use. String-searching is a session killer, in terms of both time and vibe. Also, have plenty of your most-used picks on hand, and if you use pedals make sure they have new batteries. Don’t skimp on those 9 volts! Hit the music store the day before the session and stock up.

5. Pulling your cable out without warning.
It seems like common sense from where the engineer sits, but but I’ve had preamp channels blown because of this. When recording DI or with an amp, always check with the engineer before pulling your cable out. Just ask, “Is it cool to pull my cable yet”? He or she will then have time to mute the board/preamp, and then you’re good to go.

6. Keeping the lyrics and/or song map a secret.
Take the time to print out extra lyric sheets if you’re cutting vocals, and provide notes to show the song form to the engineer and other musicians. If you can put the chords and timings above each section (verse/chorus/bridge), that helps as well. This way the engineer can follow along easily and mark up a copy with any necessary production notes. It also makes the punch in/overdub process go much smoother since anyone can simply call out, “Take it from the 2nd half of verse 3” and everyone will be in the same place. When I’m tracking a vocalist, I remind them to the point of annoyance to remember those extra lyric sheets! It’s always worth it when the session rolls along smoothly and they’re psyched to hear that playback.

7. Inviting the entourage.
Do not bring friends/girlfriends/boyfriends/fans into a session. It’s a total vibe-changer. From experience I can say without a doubt those takes usually have to be re-recorded later. There’s a lack of focus, worsened by a show-off factor, that happens when non-band members are in the studio. They also tend to bug the engineer by talking and moving around. If anything, call them to come hear the final playback after you’ve finished tracking. It’s just as cool and allows you to focus on nothing other than putting down a great performance.

Rich Tozzoli is an accomplished engineer, mixer, producer and composer. He has worked with artists such as Ace Frehley, Al DiMeola and David Bowie, among many more, and is the author of Surround Sound Mixing for ProTools. Rich is also a lifelong guitarist and composer. His work can be heard regularly on FoxNFL, HBO, and Discovery Channel.

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3 Questions – Joe Satriani

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blog_joe-satrianiWhere does your melodic sensibility come from?
I grew up listening to every kind of music: classical, jazz, Motown, rock and roll, funk, blues, rock and heavy metal. I absorbed it all and tried to remember the good bits. I like a strong melody, interesting chords and a good groove. I always thought I was part Chuck Berry, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck and Allan Holdsworth…my list of influences is long. But I wear my influences on my sleeve — it’s my way of telling the truth, musically, and also saying of thank you to those who blazed the trail.

What gear did you use on your breakthrough album, Surfin’ with the Alien?   
I used a Kramer Pacer made from spare parts and two guitars I assembled from Boogie bodies and ESP parts. On the title track, I plugged the Kramer into a Vox wah and a Chandler Tube Driver into a Marshall half-stack. We used an Eventide 949 Harmonizer for the pitch-shift effect.

What current bands or guitarists do you listen to?
Deftones, the Killers, Jack White, Ned Evett, Wolfmother and Beck. But having said that, I just found a great collection of the Carter Family on iTunes that I’ve been listening to quite a bit. I still listen to Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix a lot, too. Billy Gibbons is a big influence on me — his writing with ZZ Top is so revolutionary. Nobody writes contemporary blues like Billy.

From a 2007 interview by Pete Prown

Guitarist/Writer Pete Prown has written hundreds of guitar articles and is a contributing editor at Vintage Guitar magazine. Pete’s latest CD release, Sir Clive and the Raging Cartographers, is a manic chunk of guitar-fired surf and psychedelia.

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The Great Divide: Who’s Getting Paid (and How Much) in the Music Industry

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Most people trying to learn guitar or taking guitar lessons are probably doing so because they either A) want to be a rock star or B) want to play guitar like a rock star. And naturally, most would prefer choice “A.” After all, becoming a rock star promises glitz and glam, women and booze, fame and fortune, right? Well… wrong. At least for the most part.

After taking a closer look at the music business and investigating how much money most musicians actually make when all is said and done, it seems keeping your day job and playing guitar on the side (choice “B”) is the most economical career decision. In fact, the pizza delivery guy who plays local gigs on the weekends might actually be richer than the lead guitarist of that band you just heard on the radio or saw on MTV (wait, do they even play music videos anymore? I think we meant YouTube). It all seems illogical, twisted, and just plain wrong, but unfortunately it’s the truth. We call it “The Great Divide.”

Now we here at TrueFire realize it’s not all about the money. In fact, if you’re in it for the money, you’re in it for all the wrong reasons and probably don’t deserve it. Making music is more than just a job, and many musicians willfully sacrifice career success in terms of dollars and cents for life success in terms of happiness and satisfaction. For that reason, musicians will always make music, bands will always tour, and young people will continue to learn how to play guitar and strive to be rock stars. In the end, music lives on. But wouldn’t it be nice if musicians actually got paid what they deserve!?

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Learn The Rules

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by Charlie Doom

It wasn’t until I started trying to learn guitar, taking guitar lessons, and writing my own songs that my entire perspective on music changed: not all pop music is bad, but most of it is. And invariably, what people subjectively consider “good music” is music made by real musicians; people who understand, with seeming impossible skill, how to wield the power of music.

And at some point I learned that even the most impossible thing are possible. There are little tricks, rules and guidelines to everything and if you follow them chances are you’ll turn out a little boring, but just fine nonetheless.

I had a professor back when I was in film school who once said, “You need to learn all the rules. You need to fall in love with them. You need to know where their birthmarks are. You need to know everything about them. That’s why you’re in school – to learn the rules so you can break them.”

It’s no coincidence that our latest course, Sweet Notes, covers just this sort of thing – dissecting the impossible reasons why our favorite guitarists sound so good and why it’s really not all that impossible to sound good yourself.

Learn this course. Fall in love with this course. Know where its birthmarks are and kiss them. Once you’ve learned all you can from it show it the door with a wad of cab money then go make your own magic. Don’t worry, it’ll understand.

Truth. Love. Music.

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Duke Robillard: Beyond I-IV-V

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A master of many blues styles, Duke Robillard garners particular acclaim for his jump and swing playing. When he recently performed at a San Francisco music festival, Andy Ellis seized the opportunity to take a lesson in uptown blues. Robillard’s music is full of jazzy turnarounds and sneaky substitutions, so he was asked to explain how he transforms a typical I-IV-V, 12-bar progression into something with more harmonic pizzazz.

Audio guitar lesson:

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Tab, notation and Power Tab files available here.

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