Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Report 3: Our First Ceili Recording


by Attila Tapolczai

  The idea of a dedicated Ceili (Irish Set Dance) album first came into our minds last year, after we began playing for Irish Set Dance groups. The need for such a recording, with which the dancers can also practice in their regular workshops, seemed to be big enough to motivate us to do an own one. 

  However, I underestimated the time we needed for making such an album, especially because we recorded each instrument separately, i. e. by 'overdubbing'. I usually like to work by this method, especially if the beat needs to be exact (like for the Ceili).
Now, almost a year after we began the recording, I'm not sure if I would do this again, instead of organizing a nice live recording session with all the musicians.

  With our method the biggest challenge for me was to find a healthy and natural balance among these, not exactly traditional Ceili, instruments:

- mandolin
- fiddle
- viola (!)
- acoustic piano
- acoustic guitar
- bodhrán

  From these the very last one (bodhrán) has been the most challenging of all. The problem is the following:

  The bodhrán doesn't count as a very loud and detailed instrument in a traditional setting, especially if it's played in a large group of different instruments. It has a special role, that is a solid, driving, percussive sound, but it's usually rather dull compared to fiddle or banjo, and it's more in the background than the other two.
  To demonstrate it best, here's a sample of one of my Irish-American co-production album from The Chieftains 'Down the Old Plank Road' Vol 1 and 2 from 2002 and 2003.
It was recorded in the famous Sound Emporium Studio in Nashville, Tennessee.
For me this recording represents a kind of sound sound what usually hear at a good trad session. It's a bit chaotic, no doubt but it's as natural and live as you can get.


  On the other side of the scale there's a more contemporary bodhrán sound, although the recording I'd like to show you is from the same year, 2002. This is for me a much more stylized bodhrán sound, like what we often do with a typical rock bass drum.
But it has all the details (except maybe for the low bass), it's clear, vivid and it has power. And as I said it's not even really modern. But listeners of modern Irish & Scottish music expect something like this:


  There's another advantage of a clean, detailed percussion sound: It's good for the dancers to have a solid drive from a percussion instrument.

  Honestly, I'm inclined to a more natural (less stylized, very little EQ) sound in almost any genres. But this time I had to find a good balance to get more details out of the bodhrán (well, we had a bodhrán player who likes to hear those details) still keeping the sound as traditional or natural as I can. I let you decide if it was successful:


  As for the other instruments, the only challenge was how to pan them most efficiently.
Here I had to make a compromise as well. I usually like a pretty wide stereo image. (My favorite part of mastering is when I can finally insert an imager module into the chain, thus 'opening' the raw mix :-)) But I like to do some serious and well thought-out panning during mixing, too. This time I had to take my ambitions back a little bit in order to keep a coherence among these many instruments that were recorded separately, i. e. in a more 'sterile' way.
So we finally stayed a relatively narrow stereo image, that means more blending of the instruments, thus creating a feeling similar to a live recording session (where usually a lot of blending / leakage happens)

These were main main dilemmas during the mixing of our first Ceili album. I hope I can help you a little bit with this information, in case you find yourself in a similar situation. But to prevent such problems, you'd better do a live tracking session in the first place. ;-)
Then you'll have a tons of other issues. I might write about those later in another article.






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