Site Loader
New York, NY

It’s more useful and important than ever for songwriters to be fluent with recording and producing our songs, and to be able to do it competently for ourselves. Or to find a partner who can help.

Even going the latter route, if and when partnerships break up you’re back to the same dilemma: Our ‘demos’ are supposed to sound like masters – or at least close. And few have the money to go to a ‘real’ recording studio every time they write a song.

So, on one hand, you do have to get comfortable with recording your songs. But there are pitfalls on the other side too, and they’re easy to fall into.

Let’s say you, like many others (including me), get into production and want to make good sounding recordings of your songs. You get into a DAW – Logic, ProTools, Ableton, etc. – and start learning. There are lots of places to get help; such as from friends, on YouTube and training sites.

It’s easy to go down that recording/production rabbit hole – in fact, as with everything, you have to go down the rabbit hole and get obsessed, at least for a while, to become any good. (As Woody Allen said about his pretty good but not great clarinet playing, “I have to practice every day just to be this bad.”)

But as hard as it is to become a good producer/arranger/recordist… it’s still not as hard as writing songs. In the former you’re creating something from something. In the latter you’re often creating something from nothing. (Of course there’s often an overlap between the two.)

When you’re producing, you’re usually working on recording an already-written song, or creating a beat, that kind of thing. Whatever you do, you start with something (a song, a recording, a musician, a sound, a loop) and it gives you something back as you listen. You get a playback, you try different sounds, effects… and those sounds, effects, etc, are already there, waiting for you to use them.

When you write a song from scratch… it’s just you and the song. Prose writers call it The Blank Page. (In a way we’re lucky because we get to make sound as we go.) All writers have to deal with this – much of the time you start with nothing. Or very little, like a title, or a lick… or a writing prompt, if you’re in a workshop.

Look at the movie business. A lot of people start as screenwriters and then become directors. If they’re successful at that, they usually stop writing. Then they hire other writers to do the writing. Why? At least part of the answer is that writing can be a hard, solitary business. It’s easier to have meetings and lunches and talk a lot, sometimes to writers, than to grind out the writing yourself.

The same kind of problem can come up for songwriters and recording. As challenging as it is to become good with recording, sounds, arrangements… it’s still easier than sitting down by yourself or with a partner (which for some people helps a lot) and whipping up something from nothing or almost nothing.

The bottom line is twofold. It’s important to know how to capably record your songs or get them recorded well. And it’s easy to get sidetracked by recording.

It’s a delicate balancing act, if you want to remain a songwriter and get better at it, to not fall into the wonderful world of digital recording and avoid the sometimes painful but highly rewarding process of songwriting and the commitment it requires. The balance, a personal one for each of us, can easily slip out of whack. Finding and maintaining it is a worthwhile goal.

Let me know your thoughts in the Comments section below:

musical-balance

 

And please share on facebook etc. by clicking these tabs

Share this page on:

0Shares

9 Comments on “The Temptations of Producing/Recording vs. Songwriting”

  1. Hey Tony. Great piece on Producing/Recording vs Songwriting. It is definitely something we all have to deal with. And me – yes, i’m guilty. So here are my thoughts and my fix. When you really get involved in the endless, time consuming experimentation necessary to achieve just what I would call “competence” on industry level recording/producing software such an Pro Tools or Logic, you have to spend unbelievable amounts of time playing with the program. And, if you get there, to maintain competence and grow as an engineer/recorder/producer and stay sharp, you have to continue to do it a lot. Really a lot. And does your songwriting suffer? Absolutely. In fact, the endless time spent re-recording, remixing, etc etc etc, can easily result in your never writing another good song. You are simply not putting in the time required for that to happen. It’s a dilemma… and a tough one. IMHO, if you’re really a songwriter, I believe you have to consciously devote most of your time to songwriting and spend just enough time recording and producing so that you can make decent demos in a home studio to demo your work to other musicians for input. If you happen to write a song that deserves serious recording and production work because you really think it may have hit potential, then you hire a pro (like you, Tony), and record and produce it with someone more skilled than you at making a release quality demo. Best bro…. Larry B.

  2. If, like me, you have your own ProTools set up, it very easy to get sidetracked from the tried and tested songwriting methods, ie., instrument, pen and paper.

    I’ve gone through the recording as you write phase and am happy to say I’m back to basics. Finish the song with pen and paper then start recording it.

  3. Seems you need to produce to get any attention. Many sights that sell music require the written music as well as a good quality sound clip.

  4. Oh Gosh! This seriously rings true for me! I love both songwriting and producing and sometimes it is hard to seperate one from the other, but Writing a song from sratch is honetly the most fulfillig thing you can do! Creating something out of nothing like you said! It´s magical! Thx for sharing this post!

    Cheers,
    Katie

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *