I got an email from Matthew Alexander, who purchased my “Singing In The Studio” course. He gave me some great feedback on the training (thank you, Matthew!). And he asked a question about using monitor speakers instead of headphones when recording vocals. Here is his review, and his question:
Hi Judy — I wanted you to know how helpful
your DVD and book [Singing In The Studio package] have been. In particular, I have really benefited from the
following:1) Your suggestion to print out lyrics and go carefully
over phrasing, learning the “rhythm (as you say) of the song”. I do
something similar when I prepare my guitar parts but had forgotten to do this
for lyrics…it makes so much good sense!2) I like the suggestion of studio hands and expressive
hands. As a singer-songwriter, I am used to singing with the guitar so I really
don’t know what to do with my hands without the guitar. Your advice here is
very helpful.3) I also really like the image of not getting breath on
the glass so as to promote focused energy.4) Of course, I also sppreciate the details about what to
wear, when and what to eat, how to stand etc.Your product is unique, practical and useful.My question has to do with a possible way we were going
to record the vocals. Since I am not that used to hearing my voice through
headphones when I sing (I tend to observe my vocal rather than being in my
vocal), my producer has suggested that he play the musical tracks over the
studio speakers and that I sing the parts without headphones just using the
natural resonance of the room. As a fall back he would use the more standard
approach where I would hear the tracks and my voice through my headphones (one
ear half off…another really good suggestion of yours)while I sing. Have you
ever had success with the first approach i.e singers singing tracks without
headphones and, instead, using the studio speakers to play the tracks and using
the natural resonance of the room for vocal production? I would love to get
your opinion.
Matthew, thank you so much for your feedback on the course… As to your question: Some of the older session
(background vocal) singers I used to work with didn’t like headphones either
because they didn’t have them ‘back when’. The engineers sometimes accommodated
them by having a specialized speaker in the vocal booth which was designed so
that it didn’t get into the vocal mic too much.Here are the limitations of using speakers instead of
headphones:·
You’ll have to keep the volume coming through
them (which will be your instrumental tracks) as low as possible. This may make
it harder for you to sing in tune (and sometimes to stay in the groove), and to feel the music enough for emotional
delivery.· It will be harder to ‘punch
in’ if you make a mistake. You may need to sing the whole song from top
to bottom for every take (pass).·
Though it may be muted, there will almost
certainly be some track leakage that gets into your vocal mic. This may make
any post-processing on your vocal more difficult, or it may not matter. Be sure you take it into account when you make your decision.That said, you could try it and get magic. It’s such an
individual thing. Other options are for there to be just the right mix of
instruments and just the right level of your voice coming through your
headphones that it feels quickly natural to you to use them.One other thing…go back to using headphones with one ear half-off, and be sure you focus on singing TO someone, which should help you ignore yourself better and help you get ‘into’ the conversation.Also, there are some great web conversations such as here with suggestions as to audio engineering techniques to be able to record vocals without using headphones. Apparently some huge albums have indeed been done this way, including the Beatles.
Bill Wright says
Thanks Judy!
I have always been paranoid of signal bleed, so I'm all for headphones anytime something is going into a mike in the same room. I may add here that although I'm OK with conventional headphones, I personally don't like the kind that fit into the ear – I'm not a vocalist, but I love to hear a good mix through the phones when playing. A good headphone groove can rock! LOL…
Afterthought – perhaps my dislike of stuff inside the ears started during a period of my life when I worked in field support a help desk for Walmart ISD…
Have a Great Day!!!
BW
Unknown says
Judy Rodman is an amazing human being. She has made a believer out of me. I've been performing 200 to 250 plus nights a year for 27 years coupled with a surgical malpractice that caused vocal scaring. I have a ways to go but, the healing and re-capturong of my voice is actually happening for me due to Judy's techniques, teaching, encouragement and incredible patience… If you're having vocal or speaking issues and have found Judy Rodman, boy are you lucky… Stay tuned, more to come… Jon Frattasio, Massachusetts