Absolutely!
When it is our money, we just do whatever it takes!! I overdubbed whatever needed it, even if it sometimes didn't really improve things at all.
If we did everything in 3 takes we would do an entire song in a day. It was $1500 per song. Might as well take our time.
@Jethro Rocker - I've worked on projects where the producer liked overdubs and, TBTH, the songs were like a patchwork quilt, but they turned out OK in the end.
Ultimately, if a producer wants me to stand on my head, I'll do it.
With Radio AtÖlia, everything is done in a single take, just like a commercial project. If i screw up a guitar part, i re-record that entire track. Thats just my personal preference.
The studio is in the drummer's wine cellar at his winery in Murieta, California, so after we knock out a song, we go out and eat and spend a good amount of time just visiting and chatting, then head back into "the hole" to mix and master.
But, we only have Sundays right now to work on Radio AtÖlia projects, so we try to get as much accomplished as possible when we meet.
Our new song, "Borrowed Time," took about 1 hour to record, start to finish. The drummer 'auditioned' several drum tracks over a period of several days, drumming along to the copyright demo, until he ultimately felt that a cross-stick technique was the "right feel" for the song.
I wrote 'Borrowed Time' - words and music - on one of my 15 breaks at Fender, from a simple phrase my drummer shared with me.
True, it's not a complex arrangement and we wanted to keep it simple from inception, but the bizarre feel and time signature were also retained to keep it faithful to the original concept.
The guitar tracks are doubled, back to back and in real time, and the notes/phrases are intentionally struck at slightly different time signatures throughout the song to give it a kind of rambling, live feel.