BLOG | JUL. 2, 2009

Visitors In The Studio During Sessions?

BY GEOFF STANFIELD

VSVimage1.jpg

Tape Op contributor and studio owner/engineer/producer Mike Caffrey recently sent me some thoughts he had about visitors to the studio during sessions. See issue 73’s upcoming end rant for the origins of this piece. -LC

I always tell people that having visitors will lead to getting less done. They say, "No, it's cool they'll be quiet." Then they're usually bored, so they talk over everything (especially during mixing) or they add to the social time, then when people start tracking they get bored and leave. I'm very sensitive to the dynamic in the room. I think all sessions have the same flow - they start with a little bit of social time, then transition into work time and then everyone is on the same page. If you add anyone to the mix, they enter the room with the need for the social time, and then transition in to work time. They are out of sync and almost always bring the productivity to a halt. This is true when it's a late band member or even a late producer arriving a few hours into the session. I think when people are very aware of this, they can minimize their impact. But it's not just the new arrival's behavior - the artist can now be reset to social time. Or sometimes, they can hold on to their concentration for a few minutes to finish, but unless they're going to be flat out rude, they're going to be reset to social time. I think the timing of visitors can help. Have them come at the beginning and leave once people are in work mode. Otherwise have them come before a meal break, so that when they kill the momentum, you have the opportunity to use the momentum-less time productively (eating). Visitors can be important. Ultimately you're recording a song so that other people can hear it. These visitors are those "other people" or they're the A&R or they're partly funding it. When you have people who are not musicians, but you want to have them be part of the process, choose the timing carefully. There's another category: working people who are not musicians - photographers or videograpers. Get them there at the beginning and have them there for social time. They either need to have the cameras out early so people can adjust, or they need to wait for the flow to start and a highlight to happen and then shoot that. Then, keep shooting as if they're are a band member and the camera is their instrument. Cameras either need to be transparent or they need to be the audience. I think they can be effective in reminding people that a performance is being recorded. I think they can also take people out of their heads and sometimes improve the results be keeping them less self-critical. You can never photograph someone breaking down even though it may be the most dramatic and valuable moment to catch. That will be the end of the trust and nothing productive will happen with that person around for the rest of the project. If they don't know this and know how to recognize when to stop without being told, it's a big risk to let them in in the first place."

-Mike Caffrey

SPONSORED
Tape Op Podcast LISTEN NOW Latest Podcast Episode

NEW! EP104: JOSH "DEAKIN" DIBB

MORE ENTRIES

Tunde Adebimpe: Thee Black Boltz

April 18, 2025

Tunde Adebimpe: Thee Black Boltz

BY Geoff Stanfield

Ian Brennan interviewedTunde Adebimpe forTape Op#155, and he has just releasedThee Black Boltz, a beautifully conceived album full of interesting soni...

New Bon Iver: SABLE fABLE

April 13, 2025

New Bon Iver: SABLE fABLE

BY Geoff Stanfield

Listening toSABLE, fABLE, the new release from Bon Iver, it dawned on me that he and co-producer Jim-E Stack, have created a collection of songs that ...

New Music from Dirty Projectors

April 4, 2025

New Music from Dirty Projectors

BY Geoff Stanfield

We interviewed David Longstreth of the Dirty Projectors back in 2013 forTape Opissue #93. His new release,Songs of the Earth, is a return to a sound a...

New Music From Tortoise

March 31, 2025

New Music From Tortoise

BY Geoff Stanfield

Members of Tortoise have graced the pages ofTape Opfor years. We interviewedJohn McEntirein 2001 for issue #23, and more recently we coveredJeff Parke...

New Music From Lucy Dacus and Perfume Genius Produced By Blake Mills

March 30, 2025

New Music From Lucy Dacus and Perfume Genius Produced By Blake Mills

BY Geoff Stanfield

We interviewed producer and guitarist Blake Mills inTape Op#115and for ourpodcastin 2019. He’s produced newly-released records for both Lucy Dacus –Fo...

Fort George Brewery and Tape Op Overdub IPA

March 21, 2025

Fort George Brewery and Tape Op Overdub IPA

BY Geoff Stanfield

Brian Bovinizer is the Marketing and Sales Director at Fort George Brewery in Astoria, Oregon. Being aTape Opreader, some 11 years ago he spottedTape ...

Mdou Moctar Releases Tears of Injustice

March 5, 2025

Mdou Moctar Releases Tears of Injustice

BY Geoff Stanfield

Released in 2024, Mdou Moctar'sFuneral for Justiceis a raucous, distorted guitar-driven album that, along with bands such as Tinariwen, turns the idea...

Panda Bear Releases Sinister Grift

March 4, 2025

Panda Bear Releases Sinister Grift

BY Geoff Stanfield

It's always a good day when I discover that there is new music from Panda Bear. It hits all the marks for me; nods to the classics, modern concepts, s...

New Music From Rafiq Bhatia

February 25, 2025

New Music From Rafiq Bhatia

BY Geoff Stanfield

We hadRafiq Bhatiaas a guest on ourDISCussion podcastin June of 2023. His new release, a collaboration with pianist Chris Pattishall,Each Dream, A Mel...