•Disadvantages
of Live Recording•
•Any playing mistakes will be recorded so the individual musicians need to be well
prepared, and the group must have some experience recording live in the studio.
•Getting flawless performances from all band members simultaneously may
significantly increase the time of recording sessions. Believe me.
•Of course, all of the members of the band must be present when doing a live recording, which is, for some bands, a near-impossibility.
•You will need to listen critically to each performance and choose the
best overall version of the song.
This may mean sacrificing a great improvised guitar solo from one performance
in favor of a another performance that has all of the correct lyrics,
but has a less exciting guitar solo.
•Live band recordings may limit the microphone choices available to use.
Many of the best sounding microphones available in the studio are extremely
sensitive condenser microphones. These mics will record not only the desired
sound but also any other sounds that are happening in the room at the
time. For example if a drum kit and a loud guitar amp are being recorded
at the same time the drum sound will be picked up by the guitar microphone
and the drum mics will pick up the guitar amp sound. This is known as
“mic bleed” or “bleed over.”.
•Mic bleed can make it more difficult to get the correct balance of instruments
in the final mix.
Mic bleed significantly limits what the recording engineer can do with
EQ and other processing.
•The more instruments that are playing at once the more difficult it is
to preserve the purity of tone of each individual instrument. Recording a full live band requires a much more complex and well thought out setup (more microphones, preamps, cables, etc.) which will can add time to the recording sessions.