EVERYTHING is being done in my home studio (Vox, keys, bass, guitars, mixing, mastering) EXCEPT The drums.
Now, we went to a studio, got our drum tracks recorded into cubase (I'm using nuendo, so the projects are interchangable).
The problem is, the guy who recorded the drums used the single worse micing technique i have ever come across/mixed in my life. THe drumkit sucked and there was only one crash cymbal.
The hihat bleed is fucking terrible and comes out of EVERY mic due to shitty micing technique. My noisegates won't do anything and the hihats sound mono and panned centre.
I know bleed is natural, but this is basically 7 mics with all the same audio, basically.
Now, there question is this:
When recording a CD and mixing it, do you guys prefer to take the "what sounds best" route. or the "dignity intact" route?
The drummer made some mistakes and some parts were missed out (fills, rolls) etc.
My choices are:
A)
Delete ALL the bleed manually, and deal with some shitty playing...
B)
Scan the audio file and extract a midi track with timing/velocity for each drum and sample with DKFH superior (Benifit of easily editing out mistakes) The downside is i'm gonna be majorly editing the drummer's performance and totally replacing kit sounds.
C)
Delete all the drum tracks and borrow my neighbour's electronic kit, Use DKFH superior and have top quality sounding drum tracks played in by my drummer where we can get good takes and have no issues with shitty bleed and poor micing.
Downside is we paid money for the original tracks and this would essentially mean that money was wasted.
I am the one mixing the CD as well as all guitar playing so it's essentially my reputation on the line as a producer as well as i'm working with other bands in the near future (not as a player). So i'm basically wanting to just get the best sound possible.
What do you guys rekon? Anyone else had this before?
Now, we went to a studio, got our drum tracks recorded into cubase (I'm using nuendo, so the projects are interchangable).
The problem is, the guy who recorded the drums used the single worse micing technique i have ever come across/mixed in my life. THe drumkit sucked and there was only one crash cymbal.
The hihat bleed is fucking terrible and comes out of EVERY mic due to shitty micing technique. My noisegates won't do anything and the hihats sound mono and panned centre.
I know bleed is natural, but this is basically 7 mics with all the same audio, basically.
Now, there question is this:
When recording a CD and mixing it, do you guys prefer to take the "what sounds best" route. or the "dignity intact" route?
The drummer made some mistakes and some parts were missed out (fills, rolls) etc.
My choices are:
A)
Delete ALL the bleed manually, and deal with some shitty playing...
B)
Scan the audio file and extract a midi track with timing/velocity for each drum and sample with DKFH superior (Benifit of easily editing out mistakes) The downside is i'm gonna be majorly editing the drummer's performance and totally replacing kit sounds.
C)
Delete all the drum tracks and borrow my neighbour's electronic kit, Use DKFH superior and have top quality sounding drum tracks played in by my drummer where we can get good takes and have no issues with shitty bleed and poor micing.
Downside is we paid money for the original tracks and this would essentially mean that money was wasted.
I am the one mixing the CD as well as all guitar playing so it's essentially my reputation on the line as a producer as well as i'm working with other bands in the near future (not as a player). So i'm basically wanting to just get the best sound possible.
What do you guys rekon? Anyone else had this before?
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