Practical Recording Techniques Fifth Edition
Practical Recording Techniques The Step-by-Step Approach to Professional Audio Recording Fifth Edition Bruce Bartlett Jenny Bartlett AMSTERDAM BOSTON HEIDELBERG LONDON NEW YORK OXFORD PARIS SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO SINGAPORE SYDNEY TOKYO Focal Press is an imprint of Elsevier
Focal Press is an imprint of Elsevier 30 Corporate Drive, Suite 400, Burlington, MA 01803, USA Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP, UK Copyright 2009, by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone: ( 44) 1865 843830, fax: ( 44) 1865 853333, E-mail: permissions@elsevier.com. You may also complete your request on-line via the Elsevier homepage ( http://elsevier.com ), by selecting Support & Contact then Copyright and Permission and then Obtaining Permissions. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bartlett, Bruce. Practical recording techniques / Bruce Bartlett, Jenny Bartlett. 5th ed. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 978-0-240-81144-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Magnetic recorders and recording Handbooks, manuals, etc. 2. Sound Recording and reproducing Digital techniques Handbooks, manuals, etc. 3. Sound Recording and reproducing Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Bartlett, Jenny. II. Title. TK7881.6.B367 2008 621.389 3 dc22 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978-0-240-81144-4 2008030765 For information on all Focal Press publications visit our website at www.books.elsevier.com 08 09 10 11 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America
To family, friends, and music.
Contents DEDICATION...v PREFACE...ix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS...xiii CHAPTER 1 Music: Why You Record... 1 CHAPTER 2 The Recording Chain...5 CHAPTER 3 Sound, Signals, and Studio Acoustics...15 CHAPTER 4 Equipping Your Studio... 37 CHAPTER 5 Monitoring...67 CHAPTER 6 Microphones...79 CHAPTER 7 Microphone Technique Basics... 101 CHAPTER 8 Microphone Techniques...123 CHAPTER 9 Digital Recording...165 CHAPTER 10 Effects and Signal Processors...195 CHAPTER 11 Mixers and Mixing Consoles... 237 CHAPTER 12 Mixer Operation... 257 CHAPTER 13 Computer Recording...289 CHAPTER 14 Judging Sound Quality... 331 CHAPTER 15 Session Procedures, Mastering, and CD Burning...357 CHAPTER 16 The MIDI Studio: Equipment and Recording Procedures...381 CHAPTER 17 On-Location Recording of Popular Music...407 CHAPTER 18 On-Location Recording of Classical Music...439 CHAPTER 19 Surround Sound: Techniques and Media... 457 CHAPTER 20 Web Audio and Online Collaboration...493 APPENDIX A db or Not db...509 APPENDIX B Optimizing Your Computer for Multitrack Recording...521 APPENDIX C Impedance... 535 APPENDIX D Where to Learn More...541 vii GLOSSARY... 547 INDEX...607 Practical Recording Techniques Demo Web Site...631 ONLINE at www.elsevierdirect.com/companions/9780240811444 See the Practical Recording Techniques Demo Web Site section for the passcode to access this site.
Preface Recording is a highly skilled craft combining art and science. It requires technical knowledge as well as musical understanding and critical listening ability. By learning these skills, you can capture a musical performance and reproduce it with quality sound for the enjoyment and inspiration of others. Your recordings will become carefully tailored creations of which you can be proud. They will be a legacy that can bring pleasure to many people for years to come. This book is intended as a hands-on, practical guide for beginning recording engineers, producers, musicians anyone who wants to make better music recordings by understanding recording equipment and techniques. I hope to prepare the reader for work in a home studio, a small professional studio, or an on-location recording session. ix Practical Recording Techniques offers up-to-date information on the latest music recording technology, such as hard-disk and Flash memory recorders, computer recording, loop-based recording, keyboard and digital workstations, MIDI, surround sound, Web audio, and online collaboration. But it also guides the beginner through the basics, showing how to make quality recordings with the new breed of inexpensive home-studio equipment. The first chapter answers the question, Why do we record? Next, the book overviews the recording chain to instill a system concept. The basics of sound, signals and studio acoustics are explained so that you ll know what you re controlling when you adjust the controls on a piece of recording equipment or build a studio. Then advice is given on equipping a home studio for any style of recording, with examples of equipment manufacturers. Studio setup is covered next, including cables and connections, choosing monitor speakers, and preventing hum.
x PREFACE Each piece of recording equipment is explained in detail, as well as the control-room techniques you ll use during actual sessions. Two chapters are devoted to the technology of digital recording, audio for video and MIDI sequencing. A major chapter on computer recording covers the latest ways of creating and recording music. Two sections on remote recording cover techniques for both popular and classical music. A special chapter explains how to judge recordings and improve them. The engineer must know not only how to use the equipment, but also how to tell good sound from bad. The latest developments in recording are surround sound, Web audio, and online collaboration. All these topics are covered in detail in their own chapters. Finally, four appendices explain the decibel, suggest how to optimize your computer for multitrack recording, explain impedance, and suggest further education. On the book s Web site at www.elsevierdirect.com/companions/ 9780240811444 are audio samples that demonstrate various topics explained in the book. Throughout the text, references to specific Web site tracks guide the reader to relevant audio demonstrations. Based on my work as a professional recording engineer, this book is full of tips and shortcuts for making great-sounding recordings, whether in a professional studio, project studio, on-location, or at home. You ll find many topics not covered in similar texts: Loop-based recording Hum prevention tips The latest monitoring methods Examples of mic models by type Microphone selection guide Tonal effects of microphone placement Glossary of sound-quality descriptions The latest types of digital recorders Up-to-date coverage of computer recording Optimizing your computer for multitrack recording Documenting the recording session Audio-for-video techniques On-location recording
PREFACE xi Troubleshooting bad sound; guidelines for good sound Audio on the Web Selling your music online File sharing for online collaboration Surround sound, DVD, and Blu-ray
Acknowledgments Thank you to Nick Batzdorf of Recording magazine for giving me permission to draw from my Take One series. For my education, thank you to the College of Wooster, Crown International, Shure Brothers Inc., Astatic Corporation, and all the studios I ve worked for. Thank you to Catharine Steers, Beth Howard, Emma Baxter, Becky Golden-Harrow, Dawnmarie Simpson, and Joanne Tracy at Focal Press/Elsevier for their fine work and support. My deepest thanks to Jenny Bartlett for her many helpful suggestions as a layperson consultant and editor. She made sure the book could be understood by beginners. A note of appreciation goes to Sting, Uncle Earl, The Beatles, Led Zepplin, the Pat Metheny Group, and Samuel Barber ( Adagio for Strings ), among many others, whose music inspired the chapter Music: Why You Record. We appreciate the following manufacturers who provided photos of their products: Edirol, Boss, Korg, Alesis, Mackie, Frontier Design, Crown International, Audio-Technica, M-Audio, TASCAM, Zoom, Eventide, Rane, Lexicon, CamelAudio, Izotope, Line 6, RML Labs, E-MU, PreSonus, Digidesign, Cakewalk, Propellerhead Software, CD Baby, TuneCore, and imeem (Snocap, Inc.). Finally, to the musicians I ve recorded and played with, a special thanks for teaching me indirectly about recording. xiii