The
TASCAM 85 16B analog tape recorder can record 16 tracks of audio on 1 inch (2.54cm)
tape.
Multitrack recording ('multitracking' or just 'tracking' for short) is a method of sound recording that allows for the separate recording of multiple sound sources to
create a cohesive whole. This is the most common method of recording popular music.
Making multitrack recordings
The
TEAC 2340, a popular early (1973) home multitrack recorder, four tracks on ¼ inch tape.
Multitracking can be achieved with analogue, tape based, equipment (from simple cassette based four or eight trackers to 2"
reel-to-reel 24 track machines), digital equipment that relies on tape storage of recorded digital data (such as ADAT eight track
machines) and hard disk based systems, often employing a computer and multitrack audio recording software. Multitrack recording
devices vary in their specifications, such as the number of simultaneous tracks available for recording at any one time; in the
case of tape based systems this is limited by, among other factors, the physical size of the tape employed. Some of the biggest
professional analog recording studios used a computer to synchronize multiple 24-track machines, effectively multiplying the
number of available tracks into the hundreds. The rock group Toto recorded their fourth album on
four computer-synced 24-track machines. for example. Legend has it that Queen's
Freddie Mercury recorded his elaborate vocals for "Bohemian Rhapsody" on multiple-synced 24-track machines also, apparently the first time that process
was achieved.
For computer-based systems the trend is towards unlimited numbers of record/playback tracks, although issues such as memory
and CPU available will in fact limit this from machine to machine. Moreover, on computer-based systems, the number of
simultaneously available recording tracks is limited by the sound card discrete analogue or digital inputs.
When recording, audio engineers can select which track (or tracks) on the device
will be used for each instrument, voice, or other input.
At any given point on the tape, any of the tracks on the recording device can be recording or playing back, so that an artist
is able to record, for instance, onto track 2 and, simultaneously, listen to track 1, allowing him to sing or to play an
accompaniment to the performance already recorded on track 1. He might then record on track 3 while listening to track 2. All
three performances can then be played back in perfect synchrony, as if they had originally been played and recorded together.
This can be repeated until all of the available tracks have been used, or in some cases fact, reused.
At any given point in the recording process, any number of existing tracks can be "sub-mixed" into one or two tracks and the
original tracks erased, making more room for more tracks to be reused for fresh recording. Beatles producer George
Martin used this technique extensively to achieve multiple track results, while still being limited to using only multiple
four-track machines, until an eight-track machine became available during the recording of the Beatles' White Album. The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds also made innovative use of multitracking with 8-track machines of the day
(1965-66).[citation needed]
Multitrack recording also allows any recording artist to record multiple "takes" of any given section of their performance,
allowing them to refine their performance to virtual perfection. A recording engineer can record only the section being worked
on, without erasing any other section of that track. This process of turning the recording mechanism on and off is called
"punching in" and "punching out". (See "Punching in".)
When recording is completed, the many tracks are "mixed down" through a mixing console
to a two-track stereo recorder in a format which can then be duplicated and
distributed. (Movie and DVD soundtracks can be mixed down to four or more tracks, as needed, the most common being five tracks,
with an additional subwoofer track, hence the "5.1" surround
sound most commonly available on DVDs.)
Most of the records, CDs and cassettes commercially available in a music store are recordings that were originally recorded on
multiple tracks, and then mixed down to stereo.
In some rare cases, as when an older song is technically "updated", these stereo (or mono)
mixes can in turn be recorded (as if it were a "submix") onto two (or one) tracks of a multitrack recorder, allowing additional
sound (tracks) to be layered on the remaining tracks.
Flexibility
During multitracking, multiple musical instruments (and vocals) can be recorded, either one at a time or simultaneously, onto
individual tracks, so that the sounds thus recorded can be accessed, processed and manipulated individually to produce the
desired results. For example, after recording some parts of a song, an artist might listen to only the guitar part, by
'muting' all the tracks except the one on which the guitar was recorded. If he then wanted to listen to the vocals in isolation,
he would do so by muting all the tracks apart from the vocals track. If he wanted to listen to the entire song, he could do so by
un-muting all the tracks. If he did not like the guitar part, or found a mistake in it, and wanted to replace it, he could do so
by re-recording only the guitar part (i.e., re-recording only the track on which the guitar was recorded), rather than
re-recording the entire song. This kind of editing freedom is one of the biggest benefits of multitracking.
If all the voices and instruments in a recording are individually recorded on distinct tracks, then the artist is able to
retain complete control over the final sculpting of the song, during the mix-down (re-recording to two stereo tracks for mass
consumption) phase.
For example, if an artist wanted to apply one effect to a synthesizer part, a different effect to a guitar part, a 'chorused
reverb' effect to the lead vocals, and different effects to all the drums and percussion instruments, he could not do so if they
had all been originally recorded together onto the same track. However, if they had been recorded onto separate tracks, then the
artist could blend and alter all of the instrument's sounds with complete freedom.
Multitrack recording allows a single musician to record multiple parts, allowing duos (such as Ween) and trios (such as Cream) to produce a larger sound, larger groups to
double parts or add different instruments, and also a solo performer to create an ensemble sound, playing different parts.
Stevie Wonder, Emitt Rhodes, Skip Spence, Paul McCartney, Todd
Rundgren, Trent Reznor, Lenny Kravitz,
Elliott Smith, R. Stevie Moore, Enya, Delbert McClinton, Michael
Sembello, and Prince are among the performers to produce albums in this way, as
their own "band". Even a musician who plays no instruments can create a marketable record, as with a
cappella artist Bobby McFerrin, who performed all of the parts in his
recordings (from 1980 to 2000) vocally.
Multitracking a song also leaves open the possibilities of remixes by the same or future
artists, such as DJs. If the song was not available in a multitrack format recording, the
job of the remixing artist could be very difficult, or impossible, because once the tracks have been re-recorded together during
the mixdown phase, they are inseparable. Theoretically, one could use frequency selective filters for this, but in reality this
has not been done with any great degree of success because of the multi-harmonic (having many frequencies) nature of many musical
instruments and voices.
History
-
The process was conceived and developed by guitarist Les Paul in the 1940s with the
financial and inspirational assistance of Bing Crosby and the Ampex
Corporation, resulting in the first 8-track machine which used 1-inch tape. Through the 1950s, many popular recordings,
notably those of Les Paul and Mary Ford and Patti
Page used the technology to enhance vocals and instrumentals. From these pioneering beginnings, it evolved in subsequent
decades into a mainstream recording technique.
Using a personal computer as a multitrack recording device
Today, a sufficiently dedicated and talented artist can literally produce a million selling album in his/her own bedroom,
using only his/her personal computer as a professional tracking machine. Many artists have done this already, for example,
Mylo, Gotye and Daniel
Bedingfield. In order to use a personal computer as a multitracking device, a
minimum of three items is required:
- A personal computer which has a sound card
- Multitrack recording software installed and running on the computer. Suitable software is available at low prices or even
free, in the case of Free and Open Source Software. (The professional
recording industry standard (for both music and film) has become "Pro Tools", manufactured by Avid-DigiDesign which has won
multiple Oscars and Grammys for their revolutionary
digital recording innovations. Consumer versions of "Pro-Tools" are also available.)
- At least one or more recording sources such as a musical instrument like a guitar or a
synthesizer, a good microphone to record the vocals of a singer and/or any other sources of
sound to be recorded.
This is all that is needed to set up a multitracking studio at home capable of producing high quality recordings. The standard
sound card in a personal computer can be used to capture sounds. This is done simply by
attaching either a microphone to the microphone input jack if a vocal track is to be
recorded, or by attaching a stereo cable from the electronic device (such as a synthesizer
or a guitar amplifier) to the line input of the sound card.
Computers with appropriate software and hardware can record multiple audio tracks at once. This audio interface hardware sends
audio signals to the computer and may interface with the computer via a PCI card, USB or firewire connections.
The instruments and singers' voices are recorded onto individual files on the computer's hard drive, which function as tracks
as per traditional multitracking.
Effects such as reverb, chorus, delays can be applied by the computer software. When the musicians are happy with the sound, the multiple
tracks are mixed down onto two clean tracks, again within the multitracking software. Finally, the final stereo recording can be
burned to a CD, which can then be copied and distributed.
The Digidesign 192 i/o. An audio interface for the Pro Tools computer-based hard disk recording system.
Leading multitracking software for a personal computer includes: Pro Tools from
Digidesign, SONAR from Cakewalk, Samplitude from Magix, Cubase from
Steinberg, and Logic Pro from Apple. Pro Tools is regarded as the king of multitracking software, and is used in many recording studios
worldwide. Mixcraft from Acoustica, Inc. and N-track from
FASoft are affordable alternatives to high end multi-track software. Audacity and
Ardour are popular open source programs
for multi-track recording. Jokosher (open source as well)
is quite new, but seems to be gaining popularity among Linux users.
Order of recording
In most modern popular songs, drums and percussion
instruments are the first instruments to be recorded. There are various reasons for this. The drums are usually the rhythm
leaders; it is much easier for musicians recording later tracks to keep to the common beat of the drums, also due to the precise
attack of drum sounds. A drummer would find it very difficult to play along with a backing track recorded without percussion, due
to the likely variations in the musicians' tempo. Furthermore, in order to accurately keep to a pre-established rhythm, a drummer
would need the sound of the other instruments to be very loud to compete with his drum kit; apart from the possibility of the
drum microphones picking up the sound of the other instruments from the drummer's headphones, prolonged exposure to such volume
might very well damage his/her hearing. Also, it allows the drums to be recorded for a few seconds, then looped. Click tracks are
also often used as the first sound to be recorded, especially when the drummer isn't available for the initial recording, and/or
the final mix will be synced with motion picture and/or video images.
Also, though the drums might eventually be mixed down to a couple of tracks, each individual drum and percussion instrument
might be initially recorded to its own individual track. The drums and percussion combined can occupy the largest number of
tracks utilized in a recording. This is done so that each percussion instrument may be processed individually for maximum effect.
A common percussion effect is the slow back and forth panning of a percussive instrument's sound in the stereo field from the
left to the right channel in a song. Equalization (or EQ) is often used on individual
drums, to bring out each one's characteristic sound.
The last tracks to be recorded are usually the vocals (though a temporary vocal track might be recorded early on either as a
reference or to guide subsequent musicians, this is sometimes called a "Ghost Vocal" or "Scratch vocal"). One reason for this is
that singers will often temper their vocal expression in accordance with the accompaniment and vice versa.
Concert music
For classical and jazz recordings (particularly instrumentals) where multitracking is chosen as the recording method (as
opposed to direct to stereo, for example), a different arrangement is used; all tracks are recorded simultaneously. Sound
barriers are often placed between different groups within the orchestra, e.g. pianists, violinists, percussionists, etc. When
barriers are used, these groups listen to each other via headphones.
See also
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