Sources of Light @ r10
I recorded an album called Sources of Light, released in October 2024. I started recording it and finished . Here are some probably fairly boring details about the recording process, gear and music.
Gear
- Electric guitars: Kiesel DC6
- Acoustic guitars: Martin D-18
- Keyboards: Yamaha Motif 8 that I've had since 2003
- Interface: Focusrite Scarlett 4i4 (3rd gen)
- Effects & amp modeling: Line 6 POD Go
- Bass: Fender Precision w/ broken bridge, can't be bothered
- Microphone (for vocals and acoustic guitar): Audio-Technica AT2035
Software
For all recordings, I used Ardour v6 on Ubuntu Studio. Almost all of the production effects were from Calf Studio Gear plugins.
All guitar effects, pre-amps and modeling was from a Line 6 Go stomp box. I recorded directly into a Scarlett USB audio interface (no external cab). For acoustic guitars and vocals, I plugged the microphone directly into the interface's XLR input.
Minimal automated effects were used, except delay/reverb for vocal tracks, and a few weird things like the ring modulator at the end of The Haunted House, or the very first synth chord in Calling Out a Name. Fader automation was used extensively.
All rhythym/clean guitars were doubled, one panned hard left (90/10) and the other hard right (10/90). Lead vocals were also doubled in the same way. Acoustic guitars were also doubled and panned12. This hardcore doubling was a bit of an experiment. I think I liked it, even though it made recording take quite a bit longer.
To handle all the track doubling during the mixing phase, I created audio buses in Ardour and redirected the outputs of the doubled tracks to the bus, and then redirected the bus output to the master track. All automation was then only done on the buses; the doubled tracks were not touched except to set the panning. So there were a lot more tracks/buses to handle in Ardour than otherwise. Basically every instrument that I doubled would actually have three "tracks" in the DAW interface instead of just one. Which was obnoxious but I think it made a difference in the resultant mix. At least to me.
Drums were programmed using Hydrogen 1.x with the flac gcs instrument pack. I did very little to the drums except increasing the gain of the kick, snare and hi-hat. Otherwise I did absolutely nothing to them production-wise. Largely out of pure laziness. And also because over-produced drums annoy me.
In all cases I recorded all instruments, one at a time, from start to finish. Then the vocals, then I would do a rough mix, then program the drums, then finish mixing and any other post-production effects (that was pretty rare, though).
Tracks
Calling Out a Name
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Keyboards | ||
Bass | ||
Vocals | ||
Drums/mixing |
DAW stats
Waiting for the Stars to Fall
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Keyboards | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
Shine
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Keyboards | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
Castles in the Sky
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Keyboards | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
The Haunted House
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
Fair-weather Friend
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Acoustic guitars | ||
Electric guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
Still Alive
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Guitars/Keyboard/Bass | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |
Without You
Timing
Instrument | Start | End |
---|---|---|
Electric guitars | ||
Acoustic guitars | ||
Bass | ||
Keyboards | ||
Vocals | ||
Mixing | ||
Drums |