Behind The Scenes:
We are recording this on Cubase and we are using peavey PVM-328 Tom (drum) microphones for vocals. We discovered these by sheer accident when we were working with our new singer. He's not a stage-experienced vocalist and he wasn't versed in pulling-back away from the mike. With a Shure SM-58, its very easy to drive the microphone into clipping if the singer doesn't pull back during the more powerful vocal phrases.
We hooked up a pair of Peavey PVM-328 Tom Mics and ran each one into its own independent channel left and right, then pointed the mic's into each other in a 'V' configuration. Basically, I am singing in the 'V' across the diaphragms of the two microphones. With the PVM-328, you don't have to pull back, you can stay right on the pop filter through the entire song.
For some reason, in this version of Cubase (9.0) the Steinberg Audio Interface is giving us a kind of "natural latency" between the two microphones. If you listen closely, you will hear me taking a breath in the right channel and the spoken word can be heard in the left channel. We both felt this gave a very organic and airy effect to the vocals. The vocals were laid down in one take with no post-recording editing other than sweeping my 'foot-stomp' off the quiet parts between the vocal phrases.
My cell phone chimes at 1:49/1:50 and we just decided to leave it in the mix. We see this kind of like the door knocking just before the EVH solo in "Beat It."
The 'new' guitar tracks were recorded (in my home studio and later imported was WAV's into the drummer's DAW) on my 2021 Gibson Les Paul through my 1993 Marshall Bi-Chorus 200, Direct-Out into my Focusrite 2i2 Interface then into Audacity. On the first version of this song, One track is totally 'clean' and panned right at 55%, one track is mildly overdriven and panned left at 71% and one track is heavily overdriven and panned center.
The center panned track only kicks in during the chorus. It isn't in play at any other part in the song. No reverb, delay or other FX were used on the guitar parts.
The bass tracks were composed and recorded in 4 takes at the drummer's office at his winery in Murrieta. I used my Ibanez GSR-190 (Import) bass (a $60 Craigslist find from 2015 when I was earning a living playing bass 6 nights a week in a blues band) strung with my preference of Ernie Ball .105's into my Fender Rumble 40 Bass Amplifier. We ran an XLR cable direct into the Steinberg Audio Interface.
There's one part in the song where I speak the phrase, "Times are tough... Maybe the bad dogs should stick together?" Interestingly enough, my voice seems to be cracking during this phrase, but not when I was singing. Of course, this was recorded in one take (without a warmup) with me sipping Belgian White between the vocal phrases, but I suggested to the drummer that we maybe re-record that part.
Also, I kind of feel like the solo is too structured. What do you think? I feel like maybe the solo should be more 'wild" and less 'constrained." I really can't adequately describe how I feel, but my ear is telling me the solo doesn't fit.
What are your thoughts/impressions???
Sorry to ramble on so, but we have high expectations for this song and we are not 100% satisfied with it yet. We raised the bar on ourselves with our December 2021 debut recording of 'War Pigs' and we don't want our subsequent efforts to be lackluster in comparison.
For those who may not have heard our very first song that we recorded together as 'DeadPedal,' here's our cover of 'War Pigs.'
Hope you guys have a great day!!!!