Amy Jeanne
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,858
- Location
- Colorado
We all know that in today's music each instrument and each vocal is all recorded separately, then "cleaned up" and mixed all together to give us the final product.
How did, say, Fred Van Epps go about recording his music? Did he have to strum that banjo continuously all in one take until everyone and everything made a perfect recording? Did this method last into the 20s when electrical recording came in?
The big bands -- did they record all in one take or did they "mix"? When did "mixing" come into recording? Where were all the microphones? On very old recordings (like Fred Van Epps, for example) I notice that one instrument will be in the forefront and the others in the background. Did they record through a horn? When did "cleaning up" the music come in?
I think of these questions every time I pass the old RCA recording studios in Camden and now I'm finally asking!
How did, say, Fred Van Epps go about recording his music? Did he have to strum that banjo continuously all in one take until everyone and everything made a perfect recording? Did this method last into the 20s when electrical recording came in?
The big bands -- did they record all in one take or did they "mix"? When did "mixing" come into recording? Where were all the microphones? On very old recordings (like Fred Van Epps, for example) I notice that one instrument will be in the forefront and the others in the background. Did they record through a horn? When did "cleaning up" the music come in?
I think of these questions every time I pass the old RCA recording studios in Camden and now I'm finally asking!