Ruby Calling

The official website

My Ruby Calling Recording Experience – Part 2

In this post I want to tell you about Ruby Calling’s second recording experience.  To find out more about our first recording experience, go here.

There was a lot of thrash about when we would record.  I had originally wanted to record in the spring but our schedules didn’t align to make that happen.  Honestly, I had a bit of a crisis.  I felt like I was committed to recording but the rest of the band was not.  In fact, I felt like I needed quit the band and start a new band of people who wanted to record!  After an emotional heart to heart with my band mates, we decided to set a goal to record in the fall — together.  We spent a lot of time honing the list of songs to record and practicing them and practicing them and practicing them.

Jean and I had done some research on recording studios in Portland.  We narrowed our list down to two which we visited.  We liked both of them but the funky 70’s colors mixed with the high-tech vibe of Jackpot Recording Studios appealed to both of us.  There were two recording engineers at Jackpot!: Larry Crane and Kendra Lynn.  Having been a huge fan of TapeOp magazine and knowing that Larry Crane had recorded many of my favorite bands (Sleater-Kinney, The Gossip, The Decemberists), I was partial to him.  One of my band members thought it would be cool to have a woman engineer.  We decided to go with Kendra.  Kendra was super responsive and very professional.  We had not recorded in an official recording studio before and she was very patient with our questions.  Our band fumbled around a little but Kendra never missed a beat.  She got everything set up and ready to go.  She told us what to do and expect.  She guided us to record the very best takes.  She was an absolute pro with the recording software and driven to find the best sound.  She was very calm and made the entire recording session a pleasant experience.  It was awesome.

And then…she took our raw tracks and performed magic on them.  Not that we don’t really sound that good [insert winky eye here]…but she took the best of the best and wove them into something…more.  I am extremely pleased and proud of the results and happy that we went with Kendra.

I am not going to lie though…recording was kind of brutal.  Even after practicing the same thing over and over, I am not sure we were prepared to play it again and again with the added burden of being recorded.  At one point I thought my fingers were going to fall off!  (Who wrote that damn bass line..oh yeah…I did).  And recording isn’t all playing and playing and playing.  It is more playing and playing and sitting and waiting.  It is exciting.  And scary.  And totally fulfilling.  I loved it.

My friend Mike, Ruby Calling’s official cinematographer, came and shot some photos and some video.  I am curious to see what became of it…perhaps he is still working on it???  Mike???

After the recordings were agreed upon we had to get them mastered.  Since we were adding in a song that wasn’t recorded with the rest, we needed to find someone who could take two different recording sessions and make them one seamless EP.  We chose to go with Sky Onion and Gus was great to work with.  He mastered the songs such that they flowed from one to another plus he helped us determine the order.  I enjoyed working with him.

So here is the end result: http://rubycalling.bandcamp.com/.  We are a band of many, many songs.  These songs represent but a sampling of our repertoire.  I cannot wait to share the rest with you.

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