Freelancing in the Recording Studio Industry
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- Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024
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#recording #musicproduction #studiosetup #producer #audioengineer #recordingstudio #andrewmasters #mixing #nashville #samply #filetransfer #filemanagment #freelanceing #lossless
Big thanks to Jake Reed and Joe Carrell! What kind of work are you doing??
Thanks dude! Always great talking with you!
Awesome! Please make this a “series” with similar performers, engineers etc. Their insights are invaluable.
thanks!
Agreed this would make a great series
Agree
Agreed
Man, what an amazing video! Thank you for the insights.
Excellent video. This should be a series. All points on this one are very very helpful. Thank you.
I totally agree with Jake, don’t be a “ I know everything “ or “ look how good I am “ dude
This is gold Andrew! 🙏🏻 I recall when I was coming up these exact issues were always a major issue for me. I had no idea how to handle the “business” part. You’re doing so much for the engineering/producer community.
Andrew very enjoyable and spot on!
Appreciate it!
I've watched just about every video you have. (And have loved every second) By far, THIS is my absolute favorite. It hits home from previous experiences to what I'm currently doing. Thank you so much for this most vital, relevant MASTERPIECE!
Wow, thank you!
Great vid this week. Insights like these are valuable.
Appreciate it Andrew!
A+ sir! I watch a ton of your videos and this is easily top shelf.
Love these kinds of videos. It really brings more clarity to those that are barely starting off in the industry and want to know the business side of things as well as how to manage certain situations you may come across in your music career. Overall, great video and would love to see more vids like this one!
Great idea for a video! Loving all the different content lately. Keep it up!! 🙌
More of this please!! This was amazing insight
nice to see jake - he seems great :)
pure GOLD
Good stuff!
Thanks!
This vid should have been an hour long. Amazing content. Thanks for this.! Cheers from SW.
Excellent, excellent video with very important topics. Thank-you for sharing this invaluable information.
recording etiquette. reminds me of growing up with this band that were my older friends when I was 11-14. they were signed and we would go to alot of studio sessions, and practice spaces, and play shows in LA-SD, And as a 13 yr old Id notice all this shit, I already had great studio etiquette that's why they took me everywhere, I would basically be the Roady, until i learned to mix from the lead guitarist eventually mixing for them live and at all the practices, and then eventually started guitar Teching for the Lead and the bassist. this was like 1999-2002 Everything is the same
BE YOURSELF, DONT BE A DICK, AND BE HELPFUL BUT READ THE ROOM, DONT BE A KOOK!
Awesome info, ty
thanks for watching!
Definitely more videos like this. Absolutely loved this one. Super helpful!
As a high school senior, I am just EATING THIS UP!
Jake is a beast and such a great dude! He played on an album I'm producing and everything he said here is so true to how he operates. Killer advice all around.
This material is pretty applicable to any kind of freelancer. Thanks!
More of this type of content!
Great information, thanks :)
thank you!
As a 20 year old studio intern in LA, this was extremely insightful. Thank you!
Love it man!
Hey Andrew can you do more of the business side of Recording Studios, Engineers & Studio owners? I would love to see more content on that.
Joe is pure class.
Jake Reed, SCREAMING GOOD ADVICE!!! Hahaha. Thank you for this vid.
Appreciate it!
This was great, something I have always wondered with "freelance" when you have hired studio musicians, who makes contracts, who has rights to the music, hell who even makes the call to bring in the "right" musicians?
The producer generally hires the players, books the room, schedules the gig and oversees the entire process. Rights to the music depends on the project.
Do's and dont's are always welcome!
This was rad.
I love when audio professionals record interviews and they use a microphone that sounds like a 10usd webcam mic in another room
That’s fair
Thought i was tripping... i literally have zonnes😂.. man i aint trynna reach across the bass for the guitar pedal. All the guitar stuff... there... keyboard...there. dope real world info. Dope mane. And over prepare!
In music, the industry secret is: Be kind (to everyone, always), and read the room.
Do a video on what engineers expect from artists…(Preparation/vision) cause i always get asked “ What are we working on today?”
I just wanna be prepared as much as possible
When you are in the process of recording drums for a client, do most people send you a scratch track of guitar/vocals/click or a semi-produced track with multiple instrumentation?
This discussion reminds me of Patrick Bartley's video about being an artist vs a working musician (and the potential for overlap). The comments about being in the "service industry" really relate more to the working musician / engineer side of things. I am personally interested in and have some experience with both sides. As I am fresh out of school and about to get a non-music day job to support myself, I have been reflecting on what my ultimate goals are "in music". Is it necessary to cultivate skills in a traditional, hierarchy-based way or can one develop the skills that matter to their own personal music and it be just as effective and fulfilling? I don't think there is one right answer for everyone. I think there is something to be said for people who carve their own path, aren't concerned with freelancing, make their own music on their own terms and enjoy it, and aren't worried about making a living at it. I feel like both pursuits have been personally rewarding for me so far. I loved the insight into the money and time factors at stake with "smaller" artist-clients vs with larger, corporate projects. Been following the studio vids for a while, stoked on hopefully hearing more expansion on these business and career topics on the channel!
All good shouts
Great video. I’m gonna do the exact opposite of this so that I can say that I’m special and different. 😊
"Don't have a college kid doing his homework in the background of your interview video." 😂
Joe is the man. I was extremely fortunate to have an opportunity to shadow him over a few days in 2018 in Nashville. While I don't have any plans to pursue a career as an engineer in a big market or anything like that these days, back then he shared a lot of these kinds of tips with me and I got to see a lot of how these things really play out in real time. He's a super kind dude and he's where he's at because he's a master and an absolute delight to hang with.
I would love to shadow him 😭
Make this into a regular series! Also, how does someone get into being a studio musician in an area where there really isn’t any studios so to speak?
Same way you go skiing in a place with no snow….move
@@evoltap easier said than done especially when you have kids & family along with a disability
Idk if anyone has told you but you look like Rian Dawson's from All Time Low's long lost brother
Trash....coffee. Yes! When I was an assistant, I made it a little game...like Disney. You NEVER see them take out the trash. EVER. The coffee was always mysteriously FULL and HOT. The little things matter. Then they will trust you with the BIG things.
with the keyboard shortcut thing...if you see an opportunity...maybe whisper in their ear...or slide a note. Being helpful vs look at what I know....everyone wants to save time.
@9:24 is some truth
🎉
So glad Matt Canada isn't on drums anymore, so to speak.
I guess kissing ass is part of the job but sometimes it’s also important to let people know that you you’re not the idiot in the room
Doing a job well is the best way to show that. People don’t assume interns / runners / assistants are idiots, they assume they’re there to do that job. If you do a job well - people want you around more and give you opportunities to move up.
Bro the moustache-guy could have recorded his voice with a good mic and send you the stems amk