Musical Demo Submission thread

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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kds said:
Hi 'advice guy', I've been reading this thread for a while and would love for you to take a look at my myspace page and tell me what you think.

I really like the feedback you've been giving to people- it can be incredibly hard to find people who can give you informed feedback that's honest and constructive. My myspace is www.myspace.com/karendesilva it's got 2 tracks that I've worked on with a producer.

I've only just joined up (about 10 years after everyone else!) Ok enough chatting...

Let me know what you think!

Cheers
I like it. It's probably the best music anyone's posted here yet and it's a hell of a lot better musically than, say, Rebecca Mayes Muses. The songs are genuinely good. I thought the first song with the sine-tone stuff was clever and I actually wanted to hear more of that sine-tone stuff and less of the other stuff. The other song was a bit less interesting texture-wise and a bit too middle of the road for me but both are quite good raw songs regardless of production and it's obvious that you're working with a decent producer here.

The problem that you're going to face is that there's a lot of competition in this genre so you're going to have to stand out in some way. Right now your stuff is very competent but how are you going to get it noticed? Approach enough labels and you probably will get signed, but your stuff may then sink without a trace once it gets released unless you can find a way to stand out from the pack. Your stuff is very good but to succeed in this genre it has to be more than very good, it has to be exceptionally noticeable, because every woman between the age of 15 and 50 who ever picked up a guitar aspires to be a singer/songwriter, and you have to compete with all of them... and they all have MySpace too...

For now, if you record more songs with this producer, don't be afraid to go out on a limb. You're in danger of sounding a bit "safe", you don't want that to happen. "Safe" is hard to sell these days, that market is kind of all tied up by reality TV shows at the moment...
 

kds

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Mar 28, 2010
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Hi, thanks for that. Yes, point very much taken! These are just the first songs I've recorded so while I've been doing this I've really tried to work on my songwriting. I feel like this is one of the areas I could try to stand out as I think good songs are the most important thing, obviously along with voice, image, etc but in every other sense I would absolutely, just be another face in the crowd! So I'll definitely try to think a little more out of the box when approaching songs in the studio.

I don't understand what you meant about the 'sine-sound' is that the harmonies in the background vocals? Anyway, I'll be putting a 3rd song up there probably within a week or so which is extremely poppy- still along the same 'safe' lines but everyone seems to be liking it because its catchy, etc. Anyway I'll let you know when I've put it up and maybe you can let me know what you think?

I really appreciate your time and thanks for the compliments they're very encouraging!
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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kds said:
Hi, thanks for that. Yes, point very much taken! These are just the first songs I've recorded so while I've been doing this I've really tried to work on my songwriting. I feel like this is one of the areas I could try to stand out as I think good songs are the most important thing, obviously along with voice, image, etc but in every other sense I would absolutely, just be another face in the crowd! So I'll definitely try to think a little more out of the box when approaching songs in the studio.

I don't understand what you meant about the 'sine-sound' is that the harmonies in the background vocals? Anyway, I'll be putting a 3rd song up there probably within a week or so which is extremely poppy- still along the same 'safe' lines but everyone seems to be liking it because its catchy, etc. Anyway I'll let you know when I've put it up and maybe you can let me know what you think?

I really appreciate your time and thanks for the compliments they're very encouraging!
Sorry about the delay in getting back to you on this, I had to wait until I was in front of a computer where MySpace player actually worked.

The "sine-sound" is referring to some of the stranger keyboard noises in your song. A "sine" tone is a particular type of synthesiser-generated tone which has no harmonics. While the keyboard noise in your song isn't strictly like this, it does resemble it somewhat.

You don't have to stand out musically, there are other ways you can stand out in the industry... but you may not consider some of them acceptable for a variety of reasons. However, what you do need is a marketing strategy, and a large part of determining this boils down to answering one single question - "what would make someone buy my music/attend my gigs, as opposed to another artist of equal artistic merit?".
 

kds

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Mar 28, 2010
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Hi, yes- the eternal question you ask there! I think its probably a combination of things like the image that goes along with the music, how competent I am as a performer, advertising, connections (although I don't think this is as important as it used to be) etc.

I'm also planning to go o/s next year hopefully, I feel like Australia doesn't have as much of a playing field as the UK or US- that obviously means there's more competition overseas, but also more opportunities. My next step is to try and start performing more regularly to become more experienced as a performer. I think that will build up my confidence a lot more... Also I'm going to do a photo shoot with my friend who's a photographer to get some decent photos to post up on the websites and to go with the songs..

Anyway, can you be more specific in the, 'other ways' I could stand out?
 

Infinatex

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May 19, 2009
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BonsaiK said:
...If it's a MySpace link...
Hey mate, I've been watching this post and have decided to throw out some of my stuff for you to have a quick look at :D I've been making various hip/hip related stuff for a few years now, but never really done anything in terms of sending out demos etc. Most my stuff has just been for my mates and just for fun. It's pretty hard to make anything from music in Australia (especially Hip Hop) so I haven't really been pushing it.

Anyway I've put 2 tracks of mine (the 2 most finished I guess) up on a makeshift MySpace page for you to check out. The page is pretty ugly but on the plus side it'll take no time to load! :p Unfortunately I haven't recorded any solo stuff so both these tracks have featurings on them.

The first track (If You'd Be Mine) I only have 1 verse (which is the first one) but will be recording another soon to replace the current second verse. On the second track (Boiling Point) I'm verse 1 and 3 as well as doing parts of the hook. The production of the second track is still a bit 'meh' but hopefully I'll get some time to finish the beat and clean up the vocals this weekend. For both of these tracks I wrote my verses, the hooks and also worked with a mate in making the beats.

So let me know what you think! Here's the link: http://www.myspace.com/555798423

Cheers!!
 

Shivarage

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Apr 9, 2010
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Hey, here's my first proper demo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLs80nELTMI

Well, only things to note are that I play the instruments and realize that the drums dont sound like real drums (cause they aren't) and well... hope you like :)

edit: apparently youtube compresses files so there's a bit of fuzz that I think clears up
 

BENZOOKA

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Oct 26, 2009
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XinfiniteX said:
Hey. I know this is BonsaiK's thread. Also the first one in ages well worth reading through. When I noticed your submission I couldn't help, but to give my two cents (I know squat about music industry, but I do know my Hip Hop, having dozen years of loving relationship with it), whether they're worth anything.

First off, the beats aren't on the same scale with your rapping. A good beat can stand by its own. These are just, how should I put it, awful. Stating the obvious: Making (good) beats is truly a form of art. Only a few can successfully produce and rap at the same time, say Kanye West, Kno, Eminem, Large Professor... Even Dre isn't an extraordinary lyricist, but he sure as hell is the beat doctor. We'll get to know his current form of lyricism when if Detox ever gets out. back to the topic. It will be a long journey to get a beat from the likes of DJ Premier or Pete Rock, but there are lots of beat makers trying to make it offering beats to rappers. It might be the best course of action to get beats from such artists. Or if you already know people who can do beats, all the better. You could concentrate more on the rapping, and of course make some beats meanwhile and if you'd feel your own beats are better than available, there's nothing to stop you. You might as well go at it on some instrumentals of the type of Hip Hop you want to do. It's fun, it's great practice and helps you find the ways you want to go on with your music.

What kind of Hip Hop are you going to do? "If You'd be Mine" is more of a, I dunno how to get around it, something balladish with rhyming. Not quite hitting the one-for-the-ladies spot the average rap albums have had for a long time; besides the club-banger, getting-high and you-don't-wanna-fuck-with-us spots, a trend more or less surrounding the beginning of this millennium, which actually has faded in a way you'll have a hard time finding them all on a modern album. There are zillions of sub-genres and directions in Hip-Hop to go or get lost into after all.

Boiling Point is better. You do have a good voice. It reminds me of another rapper, can't quite remember whom though. You tend to rush the end of your lines, like you're having trouble making them fit and hit the beat. That's okay when freestyling to a difficult or unfamiliar beat, but not as much when recording a song. There are also a few unnecessary words or bad lines. While otherwise continuing solidly like a diesel train, a hastily pronounced word here and there makes the song feel twisted. If it doesn't fit the beat, work your flow to dance around the beat, so it won't affect thusly, or write it differently.

Your flow is smoother than the average unsigned rappers', just mix the rhyming patterns up a notch, it's quite predictable. For delivery, you're halfway there, it's not that monotonous, but it still lacks the emotion and strong presence which is very important. One doesn't need to be Ol' Dirty Bastard, but it takes something different if trying to pull it like Ma$e. Attack people's headphones.

Just one more thing: Lose the preludes. You don't need to tell about the song before it begins. Nowadays rap songs start immediately, that doesn't mean beginning a verse at the first bar. Rather the times of, let's say 20 second old movie dialogue samples as preludes á la Wu, are no good to anyone anymore. Especially if your trying to get people's attention. It's a different thing when Jay-Z and Nas kick their decades lasting feud and do a collaborative. Also, usually spitting doubles goes a lot better on gigs than on recorded songs.

You need a good beat to make a good rap song, and you need to kill that beat.

There's a beat that works great on its own as well.
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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kds said:
Anyway, can you be more specific in the, 'other ways' I could stand out?
Look at any popular artist today and look at the way they stand out. Besides the music, what do you remember them for?
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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XinfiniteX said:
BonsaiK said:
...If it's a MySpace link...
Hey mate, I've been watching this post and have decided to throw out some of my stuff for you to have a quick look at :D I've been making various hip/hip related stuff for a few years now, but never really done anything in terms of sending out demos etc. Most my stuff has just been for my mates and just for fun. It's pretty hard to make anything from music in Australia (especially Hip Hop) so I haven't really been pushing it.

Anyway I've put 2 tracks of mine (the 2 most finished I guess) up on a makeshift MySpace page for you to check out. The page is pretty ugly but on the plus side it'll take no time to load! :p Unfortunately I haven't recorded any solo stuff so both these tracks have featurings on them.

The first track (If You'd Be Mine) I only have 1 verse (which is the first one) but will be recording another soon to replace the current second verse. On the second track (Boiling Point) I'm verse 1 and 3 as well as doing parts of the hook. The production of the second track is still a bit 'meh' but hopefully I'll get some time to finish the beat and clean up the vocals this weekend. For both of these tracks I wrote my verses, the hooks and also worked with a mate in making the beats.

So let me know what you think! Here's the link: http://www.myspace.com/555798423

Cheers!!
The only band that makes decent money making this sort of music in Australia is Hilltop Hoods. Almost everyone else still has their day jobs, or is living off pizza money. Rap is far and away the very worst currently popular style of music to get into if you're interested in making money, which is a pretty interesting irony when you think about it. In fact even more ironic is that the success of Hilltop has given lots of other Australian rappers false hope that they can follow a similar path, when in fact there's probably only room for one band like that in the Australian marketplace at a time.

That doesn't mean you can't rise to the challenge of course. With regard to MCing firstly, if you think of all the very successful MCs and what they all have in common, it's a very instantly recognisable delivery and force of personality. Right now there's nothing horribly wrong with your delivery (except that maybe if I was a girl and I heard the lyrics on that first track I'd be exceptionally creeped out) but you're not very distinctive either. You just sound like... some Australian guy.

I guess the beats are pretty mundane, but unlike benzooka I don't think writing good beats is even remotely difficult, and the only reason why I don't write beats and sell them to Australian rappers myself is that it means I'd have to start a business relationship with Australian rappers and I'd really rather do just about anything else than that. (I did write some beats for a film producer once though, but nobody was going to rap over those.) Mind you hardly anyone seems to be able to do it so maybe it really is hard to them, but I sure as hell never found it hard. I think a lot of rappers find beat-writing difficult because those people often don't have the required background to write a decent beat - rapping doesn't tend to appeal to people with the musical engineering background required to create something like this:


This isn't a rap song by any means but I've posted it because all the usual hip-hop production tricks are here, and highly exaggerated, so hopefully you notice them. Specifically, shitloads of compression is important. If you're not sure what I'm talking about, listen to the ride cymbal in this song, and how it has this weird oscillating sound, like the volume is being periodically sucked out of it. That's because the volume is being sucked out of it, by a compressor which is tied not just to the ride but to other parts of the kit, and when those other parts hit hard, the compressor clamps down on the entire kit mix, which includes the ride, resulting in rapid relative volume decrease of the ride vs the rest of the kit. However overall kit volume stays constant, because that's what a compressor does - compresses volume. If I've lost you by this point, you need to do some reading on compressors, compression ratios, and how they work, if you want to get some good beats going. If you can't do it yourself, hire someone who can.... but not me. Cheers.

Rap is highly processed music and the dynamic range of it, when produced correctly, is basically nil once the beat kicks in. There's a reason for that - it's supposed to work "in the club", and club DJs don't like it when they take one platter off, put another one on and there's a volume variance or some quiet airy-fairy shit going on. A few seconds is okay, any more and people are getting bored and leaving the dance floor. Nothing is ever quiet on a rap record, even in the "quiet" parts.

Your two songs are at loggerheads - people who listen to that "for the ladies" rap generally aren't the same ones who would like what you're doing on Boiling Point. My advice would be to pick a specific direction to head in, and stick to it. Don't worry too much about being fashionable - anyone who ever did anything worthwhile in rap was looking forward, not sideways. However, you want musical as well as ideological consistency, and socincally it has to be strong which means you need to project more personality into it somehow, so you sound less like some random Australian guy who can rhyme pretty well and more like... I don't know, something else.

benzooka said:
Just quoting you as a courtesy so you know I replied. For the record I think interludes can work, they just don't work here, because they also require a peculiar personality of delivery.
 

zen5887

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Hey man.

I've been busy playing around in Reason the last couple of weeks and I've come up with a couple of tunes I'm pretty happy with.

http://soundcloud.com/zenkraft

Making money off these tunes (also any tips would be appreciated) isn't really my goal here, just wondering if you had some advice about the production/technical side.. Seeing as I'm a totally noob when it comes to this stuff.

Thanks =)
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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Shivarage said:
Hey, here's my first proper demo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLs80nELTMI

Well, only things to note are that I play the instruments and realize that the drums dont sound like real drums (cause they aren't) and well... hope you like :)

edit: apparently youtube compresses files so there's a bit of fuzz that I think clears up
As far as the song goes, it's not too bad, but it's too short to really go anywhere much. Just when it sounds like it's warming up to do something potentially interesting, it ends. There is a market for this kind of thing, and here's what you're competing with:


Top priority for you right now, besides fleshing out your song more, should be improving your recording gear and techniques so you can get a fuller sound. You might want to try DI'ing your drums, you'll get more bass that way. All but the best electronic drums don't sound like real drums, but even the cheapest kits sound better than that when they're recorded right. The clean guitar doesn't sound too bad but the distorted electric guitar sound is hideous! I'm not sure what sound you were going for there, but you certainly didn't get it, unless you were after Burzum meet Fischer-Price, which I doubt. I'm not sure if it's your distortion pedal or maybe just whatever you're using to record this with that's at fault, maybe a combination (it's not YouTube's compression I assure you of that), but the end result is that your distortion has no balls. I'd love to know what instruments and equipment you used to make this so I can suggest some alternatives (or ways to make your current setup work better).

You might also want to seek out some musical partners in crime so you can attempt some of this stuff in a live setting at some point. The days of studio-only projects are pretty much over in the industry.
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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zen5887 said:
Hey man.

I've been busy playing around in Reason the last couple of weeks and I've come up with a couple of tunes I'm pretty happy with.

http://soundcloud.com/zenkraft

Making money off these tunes (also any tips would be appreciated) isn't really my goal here, just wondering if you had some advice about the production/technical side.. Seeing as I'm a totally noob when it comes to this stuff.

Thanks =)
Okay, I made myself click on a Soundcloud link...

The dubstep one is fine, in that it's nothing amazingly special but it sounds more or less like dubstep should. The rap one is fine (assuming that's wholly your beat, do you want to write a beat for XinfiniteX?). The D&B one is fine, again nothing amazing but it definitely doesn't sound any worse than any other D&B I might have heard in a club somewhere while I was trying to talk to some chick. I could see it in a movie or a computer game. The orchestral one, you should take that off your page, it makes you look bad. It all sounds so obviously MIDI-programmed and lacking in ambience and there's no really good melodies there, it sounds like it was written by a completely different person, with another program, in a different studio. My main advice here is don't just DI MIDI gear or use MIDI trackers unless you're going to tinker with things after. The dry, artificial sound which is an asset to the D&B, dubstep and hip-hop beats is working against you for the orchestral track. Also, less is more, don't swamp the track with lushness until the climax, it's way too sugary, and I'd consider severely paring down the drums or even removing the drums altogether. Orchestral music is unlike the other styles you're doing in that it needs dynamics to breathe, so don't be afraid to get soft before you get loud.
 

Shivarage

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Apr 9, 2010
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BonsaiK said:
Shivarage said:
Hey, here's my first proper demo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLs80nELTMI

Well, only things to note are that I play the instruments and realize that the drums dont sound like real drums (cause they aren't) and well... hope you like :)

edit: apparently youtube compresses files so there's a bit of fuzz that I think clears up
As far as the song goes, it's not too bad, but it's too short to really go anywhere much. Just when it sounds like it's warming up to do something potentially interesting, it ends. There is a market for this kind of thing, and here's what you're competing with:


Top priority for you right now, besides fleshing out your song more, should be improving your recording gear and techniques so you can get a fuller sound. You might want to try DI'ing your drums, you'll get more bass that way. All but the best electronic drums don't sound like real drums, but even the cheapest kits sound better than that when they're recorded right. The clean guitar doesn't sound too bad but the distorted electric guitar sound is hideous! I'm not sure what sound you were going for there, but you certainly didn't get it, unless you were after Burzum meet Fischer-Price, which I doubt. I'm not sure if it's your distortion pedal or maybe just whatever you're using to record this with that's at fault, maybe a combination (it's not YouTube's compression I assure you of that), but the end result is that your distortion has no balls. I'd love to know what instruments and equipment you used to make this so I can suggest some alternatives (or ways to make your current setup work better).

You might also want to seek out some musical partners in crime so you can attempt some of this stuff in a live setting at some point. The days of studio-only projects are pretty much over in the industry.
I used a "Fender Frontman 15G" amplifier, a Fender Telecastor and a "chorus ensemble" effect pedal - the amp has a distortion setting. I recorded with audacity and a guitar hero usb microphone so, thats how i recorded it...

the amp was a hand-me-down cause im poor lol though i have saved some money up now so i can afford to buy more, you're definately helping ^_^
 

zen5887

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Jan 31, 2008
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BonsaiK said:
zen5887 said:
Hey man.

I've been busy playing around in Reason the last couple of weeks and I've come up with a couple of tunes I'm pretty happy with.

http://soundcloud.com/zenkraft

Making money off these tunes (also any tips would be appreciated) isn't really my goal here, just wondering if you had some advice about the production/technical side.. Seeing as I'm a totally noob when it comes to this stuff.

Thanks =)
Okay, I made myself click on a Soundcloud link...

The dubstep one is fine, in that it's nothing amazingly special but it sounds more or less like dubstep should. The rap one is fine (assuming that's wholly your beat, do you want to write a beat for XinfiniteX?). The D&B one is fine, again nothing amazing but it definitely doesn't sound any worse than any other D&B I might have heard in a club somewhere while I was trying to talk to some chick. I could see it in a movie or a computer game. The orchestral one, you should take that off your page, it makes you look bad. It all sounds so obviously MIDI-programmed and lacking in ambience and there's no really good melodies there, it sounds like it was written by a completely different person, with another program, in a different studio. My main advice here is don't just DI MIDI gear or use MIDI trackers unless you're going to tinker with things after. The dry, artificial sound which is an asset to the D&B, dubstep and hip-hop beats is working against you for the orchestral track. Also, less is more, don't swamp the track with lushness until the climax, it's way too sugary, and I'd consider severely paring down the drums or even removing the drums altogether. Orchestral music is unlike the other styles you're doing in that it needs dynamics to breathe, so don't be afraid to get soft before you get loud.
Hey now, nothing wrong with Soundcloud... Is there..?

but yeah, thank man. "Nothing amazing but nothing wrong" is pretty much what I was hoping for. They are my first attempt at both genres, so I think I did alright. Hopefully with a couple more tries I can start getting a bit innovative.
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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Shivarage said:
I used a "Fender Frontman 15G" amplifier, a Fender Telecastor and a "chorus ensemble" effect pedal - the amp has a distortion setting. I recorded with audacity and a guitar hero usb microphone so, thats how i recorded it...

the amp was a hand-me-down cause im poor lol though i have saved some money up now so i can afford to buy more, you're definately helping ^_^
Audacity, fine. Fender Frontman, not the greatest amp on Earth but it'll do if you know how to record it right. Telecaster, fine. Guitar Hero USB mic? There's your weakest link in the chain, throw that shit out and get a proper mic ASAP. A Shure SM57 is the industry standard instrument microphone for live work, they'll do the job for a home studio too and they're not even all that expensive these days, but you can probably find other good brands too. Unlike say, guitars, where a $300 instrument can often outperform a $5000 instrument, you definitely always get what you pay for with mics - the cheap junk sounds like cheap junk, and right now you have one of the cheapest, junkiest microphones out there. You might also want to consider buying a cheap 4 channel mixing desk so you can easily adjust input levels, gain and EQ before the signal hits Audacity, and also so you've got somewhere to plus a pro/semi-pro mic into...
 

kds

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Mar 28, 2010
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Oh yeah, so I guess pretty much what I said previously such as image, persona, performance etc... Yeah I spend most of my waking hours brainstorming these things and looking for ideas. I think when I shoot some photos that will be a good opportunity to explore some of them and see what works on print and what doesn't.
 

Shivarage

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Apr 9, 2010
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BonsaiK said:
Shivarage said:
I used a "Fender Frontman 15G" amplifier, a Fender Telecastor and a "chorus ensemble" effect pedal - the amp has a distortion setting. I recorded with audacity and a guitar hero usb microphone so, thats how i recorded it...

the amp was a hand-me-down cause im poor lol though i have saved some money up now so i can afford to buy more, you're definately helping ^_^
Audacity, fine. Fender Frontman, not the greatest amp on Earth but it'll do if you know how to record it right. Telecaster, fine. Guitar Hero USB mic? There's your weakest link in the chain, throw that shit out and get a proper mic ASAP. A Shure SM57 is the industry standard instrument microphone for live work, they'll do the job for a home studio too and they're not even all that expensive these days, but you can probably find other good brands too. Unlike say, guitars, where a $300 instrument can often outperform a $5000 instrument, you definitely always get what you pay for with mics - the cheap junk sounds like cheap junk, and right now you have one of the cheapest, junkiest microphones out there. You might also want to consider buying a cheap 4 channel mixing desk so you can easily adjust input levels, gain and EQ before the signal hits Audacity, and also so you've got somewhere to plus a pro/semi-pro mic into...
I'll get down to that :)

any advice on what to look for in a musical partner or what to look out for?
 

BonsaiK

Music Industry Corporate Whore
Nov 14, 2007
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Shivarage said:
BonsaiK said:
Shivarage said:
I used a "Fender Frontman 15G" amplifier, a Fender Telecastor and a "chorus ensemble" effect pedal - the amp has a distortion setting. I recorded with audacity and a guitar hero usb microphone so, thats how i recorded it...

the amp was a hand-me-down cause im poor lol though i have saved some money up now so i can afford to buy more, you're definately helping ^_^
Audacity, fine. Fender Frontman, not the greatest amp on Earth but it'll do if you know how to record it right. Telecaster, fine. Guitar Hero USB mic? There's your weakest link in the chain, throw that shit out and get a proper mic ASAP. A Shure SM57 is the industry standard instrument microphone for live work, they'll do the job for a home studio too and they're not even all that expensive these days, but you can probably find other good brands too. Unlike say, guitars, where a $300 instrument can often outperform a $5000 instrument, you definitely always get what you pay for with mics - the cheap junk sounds like cheap junk, and right now you have one of the cheapest, junkiest microphones out there. You might also want to consider buying a cheap 4 channel mixing desk so you can easily adjust input levels, gain and EQ before the signal hits Audacity, and also so you've got somewhere to plus a pro/semi-pro mic into...
I'll get down to that :)

any advice on what to look for in a musical partner or what to look out for?
This is getting towards the territory of my other thread so I'm going to move it there...