[Harp-L] grooving to backing tracks, drum machines, etc... (long)
- To: harp-l <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Harp-L] grooving to backing tracks, drum machines, etc... (long)
- From: Slim Heilpern <slim@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 06 Dec 2008 09:27:58 -0800
- User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.14 (Macintosh/20080421)
Hi All -
Just wanted to add my 2 cents about playing with backing tracks and
other non-human accompaniment.
From the player's perspective, if you are trying to improve your
all-around skills, it's all good. Playing with anything mechanical or
pre-recorded is an art, just like jamming with humans, or following a
human conductor. The more you do it, the better it feels and sounds.
Anyone who would like to get into session playing needs these skills.
From a listener's perspective, it can be disconcerting that the music
you are hearing in a performance venue is partially canned, but
depending on the quality of the tracks, the mix, and the ability of the
human performer to add something special, it can work. It is always a
hurdle though, to capture the audience's focus and attention, when they
can clearly see that only some of the music is live.
It is of course possible to create great music by playing along with
backing tracks, especially those that you've created yourself. Think of
all those studio albums with great grooves that were the product of
overdubbing (Steely Dan, Stevie Wonder, etc....).
I played for many years with a live band and then for many years with a
computer on stage providing most of the backup, so I know a little bit
about this. I've also done lots of multi-track, over-dubbed recordings
over the years and a lot of the same issues are at play.
Here are a few tidbits of knowledge I've picked up that may be helpful
if you need to play in any of these contexts:
- Practice with a metronome. Nothing like a plain old metronome to show
you where your natural tendencies to speed up or slow down lie. This
will not only help you play with canned drums or a click track, it will
help you play with other humans as well, since not everyone has the same
tendencies over a given piece of music. It forces you to listen as you
play and make adjustments as necessary. It helps to perfect your
internal clock. If you're not used to playing with a metronome, you will
swear that the metronome is speeding up or slowing down. Learn to trust
the metronome and you will start to realize how imperfect we humans are
at judging time.
- Human perception of time is fickle. Try this: play for 15 minutes or
so with a fixed time metronome, drum box, or backing track. Then play
with the exact same track after having a couple cups of caffeine. You
will swear that the tempo has slowed down. Likewise, if you play with
the same track when you are really tired, it will sound fast. There is
nothing wrong with this, and there is no reason to always play something
at the exact same tempo. However, when you are working with other
musicians, they might not be in the same state of mind as you are, and
their perception of tempo may be different at any given time. Learn to
appreciate this and be flexible. There is no one correct tempo for a
given piece of music.
- Sequencers, Drum Boxes, and "Humanization": I used to build MIDI
software sequencers for a living and have a good knowledge of how
'huminization' works. There's nothing very human about it, since it
involves the randomization of how exact in time each note is played.
That's not really what we humans do, although the effect can sound
convincing. We tend to have some musical reason for playing a particular
beat early or late. If you are creating backing tracks using a
sequencer, it is often more realistic to record without quantization,
even if you have to do it at a slower tempo, to retain a real human feel
(if you are a reasonably good MIDI drummer). MIDI recording is just like
audio recording except you have much better control of time. You can
record really slow and play it back up to tempo with no degradation of
audio quality, while maintaining your personal human feel. Another
sequencer technique, which is sometimes called "Soft Quantization" is a
nice compromise, preserving your feel, but tightening it up a bit.
- When performing or recording with backing tracks, make sure the
backing tracks relatively loud in your personal mix so you can really
get into the groove. Think of how loud a drummer is when you're standing
right next to him or her. It can make a big difference.
- Slim.
--
www.SlideManSlim.com
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