I have recently bumped into an alarming number of acquaintances who are leaving the audio industry after decades of hard graft. A couple are returning to college to study unrelated subjects, journalism and computer studies, one is driving a truck, two are moving sideways into video and one plans to be a plumber.  The others haven’t a clue what they’ll do next.

These are not tape-ops, wannabes or bluffers.  They are top professional who have produced or engineered chart albums.

I hope the grass is greener in their chosen pastures.  At least they see some grass upon which to graze.  Sadly, the modern recording industry resembles the Kalahari Desert, a vast expanse of nothingness stretching out beyond the horizon, broken only by an occasional mirage of deceit in the form of record companies offering promises, promises, promises.  Payment will be rendered if the record sells.   But when and if and maybe don’t put bread on the table or pay the rent.

Talent is unique, experience hard-earned.  It takes years of slog to hone skills that can be consigned to the scrap-heap in the flicker of an eyelid.  And when that happens, our industry is impoverished.

On the other side of the balance sheet, there are tens of thousands of young hopefuls studying for Music Technology degrees.  For what?  Twenty-seven grand of long term debt?  Where is the work?  Are these dreamers told that prospects don’t exist?  Those few who do find gainful employment usually teach. We therefore have the ludicrous situation where students rely on lecturers, whose only experience is having studied the same course, perpetuating myths, magnifying bookish misconceptions, substituting theory for common sense

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t believe that you can learn how to make records in a classroom, any more than you can read up on how to fly a jumbo jet.   Unless you get airborne and have flown sufficient miles, no airline in their right mind would let you near a cockpit and neither would Ryan Air.  Even a qualified pilot will often spend a decade assisting before being allowed to twiddle his joystick unaided.  Why, then, should anyone assume that a couple of years spent messing with Logic and a Soundcraft Spirit desk can qualify the Mu-Tech graduate to teach, let alone produce a professional session?

Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for education.  There are some first rate courses on offer, such as Tonmeister at Surrey University.  What rankles is the implication that a recording degree qualifies the holder for a job.  It doesn’t. Recording isn’t like plumbing or bricklaying.  It’s an art, a combination of talent and experience.

Making records is alchemy, not cookery.

So the question that I ask my retiring friends is not why they are leaving the record industry, but rather, why did the industry leave them?

Eccentric

 

Follow Eccentric every week here on the RP/Blog

 

record producer phil english in his analogue recording studio domain hosting the full english podcast

 

Phil English runs Alexander Sound Studios in Milton Keynes, just 35 minutes by train from the centre of London.

Phil came up with a brainwave, that RecordProduction.com needed more equipment reviews and his insight as a busy producer and studio owner.  We were very happy to take Phil up on his idea and the ‘Full English’ was born.

The Podcast is aimed to be monthly to start and we are now up to Podcast number two.

Click here to follow the iTunes link to listen or download.  Please add your reviews and let your friends know.

Oh, if you would like to be part of the Podcast, Phil is looking for people all over the World who would like to Skype in and be part of the show.  Phil’s contact info is included in the Podcast.

Podcast Number One is HERE

 

Fran-Ashcroft05Fran Ashcroft:

Spotify, i-Tunes and the X-Frigging-Factor

All I seem to read on music biz sites and messageboards are ongoing arguments about file sharing, Spotify, i-Tunes and the X-Factor.

Has music really become such a disposable commodity, nothing more than light entertainment? It’s supposed to be more than that. If it’s meaningless, it’s worthless; that may explain declining record sales more than file sharing does.

There have been times when pop music was somewhat socially and artistically important, when records enriched people’s lives in a meaningful way. This has always been when artists were the engine driving everything, not labels, accountants, managers, producers or technology.

Ask yourself what leaps of artistic progress and innovation have been made in the last five years? Last 10 years?

Where are the pioneering indie e-labels that should be pumping out cutting edge download only singles like there’s no tomorrow?

There should have been an explosion of them by now. It’s cheaper to record and release records than it’s ever been. And promo takes more time than money, if truth be told – hats off to the BBC for allowing anyone to upload their tracks for a shot at some airplay. I wouldn’t like to A&R the ocean of stuff they must get every week, but they do genuinely play new artists who don’t always have a plugger or school tie to get them in  the door.

I know this is true as I’m working with a young band right now who got a feature slot on Radio One just a few weeks ago. I assumed labels had been sniffing around. No, not one, they said – we have a hard time just getting gigs.

Makes you wonder who’s listening, eh?

 

The first of a new series by Compressor

compressor

I’m a humble studio owner somewhere in Europe, it could be in a town, a village or a City. However, I wouldn’t want you to focus too much on my whereabouts, or my identity. Rather, just read and enjoy the pain and suffering we owners go through to ensure that history is made every day! I felt that it would be self-serving for me to offload some of my hopes and fears onto your broad shoulders.

Another day, another cv! I worry about the kids of today. How many kids are studying for degrees in either Music Tech, Popular Music, Music Composition, Recording Architecture or some other BA? What hope have they got of getting a job in a studio? Historically, you made the tea if you were lucky…then after 2 years changed the tapes. Then maybe…just maybe you got to talk to a Producer! Pay??? Forget it. Years of slave labour…for the love. There were no degrees..so I guess there has been a change to the better…but you can learn in 3 months in a studio what they take 4 years to teach in a College.

With the explosion of home recording…an LE and a MAC….loads of kids can now combine creativity with technology. Ping-ponging my Fostex 4 track was my highest achievement! Forget comping, cutting and pasting and auto tune…..we are talking bouncing in of the lowest quality on a TDK 90!! Now, they leave college….they’re in debt…they’re in a hurry..they want to be a Producer! I had some kid in recently….out of college….I’m in the Control Room with a client listening back….he walks in…leans over and turns the fucking volume up!! He’s no longer with us!

Here’s my concern: hundreds of kids leave College with their degree. They hope to work in a studio. Guess what? There aren’t enough studios anymore…they’re closing faster than pubs. Everyone wants a deal….but you know what…you keep blasting us below the waterline….and we’ll sink.

Did you hear this one? ‘Hi….sorry we haven’t called you in a few months….we’re looking for a few days for one of our producers….sorry..the budget’s zero…but we really like you guys….and we love your set up…we love you…not enough to give you a proper booking…just the shite that no other studio wants…but we thought that you might be able to help us…blah fucking blah….my kids are HUNGRY!!

The studios that are open….they have a team already with a hundred more waiting in the wings. It’s tough. I reckon there are 1 or 2 jobs, today in my country in a studio. That’s untenable. What to do?

How about this for the theory of the week from the Compressor:

How about they buy a slice of my studio? They just bought the Dome for Christ’s sake! I would be happy to tie up with a top College….they buy 10% of my studio…and I’ll have a new student every year! They buy 20%….I’ll take 2!

In fact, buy the whole thing….and I’ll just run it for you for a salary….you get a proper training ground for your students…I get paid…now you can’t get fairer than that.

TTFN…. Compressor



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