CosmicD wrote:It's no big deal really to take the piano reverb settings over for the vocals, it's the same plugin anyway. It would sure be a bit more "realistic". )
No, no, no. I meant almost the opposite--reduce the reverb on the piano. You might give her a little reverb, but very little, and only if the piano reverb is reduced.
To me, and this gets subjective fast, she seemed to be singing in a booth, and not projecting much as a result. Get her out of the booth, if so, when you record again. Not all singers do well in a booth. Let the woman sing.
Please don't take this the wrong way--a piano and singer arrangement seems simple, but it's one of the most difficult recordings to make, since both instruments are so exposed. The ice-skating situation: it looks lovely partly because it seems so simple, but in reality, it's very hard. There are very, very few good recordings of Holiday or Armstrong or Sinatra or Fitzgerald or Julie London (had to get her in) with a solo piano backing, and with reason. (And lots of serious, more raw singers avoided the arrangement--Janis or Grace Slick singing solo with piano? Beth Gibbons?) There's Joni Mitchell, yes. There aren't many more with recent singers using recently developed equipment--Krall or for that matter McLachlan and Norah Jones, all of whom I often love, and they are playing the piano, and the vocal mics pick up some sound from the piano, so the situation differs--they can control the overall sound as they create it. And they've probably tried out every mic and micing setup possible using the best recording equipment that Sony et al can find...
(No, I don't know what "realistic" is. I love a good singer over almost anything. I really love Beth Gibbons mixed in with just about anything. But there's something about the exposed beauty of a voice and piano or any acoustic instrument together. Joni Mitchell on a good night with a good piano doing "River"? Nellie Mckay singing "If I Had You," backing herself with her ukelele? I don't know. Maybe not "realistic." Maybe just a convention, but I love it.)
Let us hear more, please. You're doing something very valuable but difficult. Constructive, I'm trying to be. To me, this is a peak to be achieved--piano and vocal using PianoTeq, and you've stepped forward with a good recording.
Last edited by Jake Johnson (30-08-2020 17:41)