Same day Fiddle Track Over The Internet Via Tracks Online!
Posted: April 15, 2014 Filed under: Client News, Now Tracking, Tracks Online | Tags: 33334, 42nd Street Studios, fiddle player Jenee, Florida., Ft. Lauderdale, Marc Loren, nashville trax Leave a commentMarc Loren of 42nd Street Studios hired us to do a fiddle track (for a country song he’s been working on for one of his clients) through our Trax Online service.
It was a bit of a rush job, we were contacted by Marc in the morning and he needed to mix that afternoon. Our fiddle player, Jenee, happened to be available.
Done deal!
“Her playing is excellent and fit perfectly with this track. I look
Forward to future projects with you.” Marc
If you ever need him and you’re in the Ft. Lauderdale 33334 area, Marc does great work. We look forward to a long and prosperous relationship with him and 42nd Street Studios.
If you need a fiddle or violin track, or any instrument for that matter, text or call us 615-319-8616. Or e-mail nashtrax@bellsouth.net
Harmony Singer Online
Posted: April 15, 2014 Filed under: Studio Services | Tags: BGV stacks, Harmony Singer Online Leave a commentProducing original music at home is popular but so many people who “roll their own” don’t know where to turn for just the right singer. The singer IS the song so it’s imperative that you hire the right one, but it can be frustrating to find a singer locally that sings well, fits the song and has a clue on how to deliver a track.
Yet it may be the easiest thing you do.
Simply pick your singer from this page
Need only harmony or both lead and harmony? Extensive BGV stacks? You’ll find that here.
Vocal Tracks Online Service: Hire a Nashville demo singer for your song production!
Posted: April 14, 2014 Filed under: Client News, Music Industry News, Studio Services | Tags: female country singer tracks online, female singers online, JenniferL Nashville Session Singer, male singers online, Nashville session singer, nashville trax recording studio, singers over the Internet, Vocal Tracks Online Leave a commentTake a quick look at the choices available at Vocal Tracks Online!
06-12-14 For Immediate Release:
Nashville Trax Launches Vocal Tracks Online!
Many self-producers and sometimes even experienced studio owner/producers don’t have the right singer available for a particular song. Vocal Tracks Online solves that problem by offering the client proven Nashville session singers over the Internet who can be added to their work by trading files online that lock right up to their project. It’s easy and it’s smart business!
The producer doesn’t have to “search and hope” by running Craigslist ads and other dubious singer search methods. They can get proven, reliable talent with great pitch and tremendous skills to make their singing choice a “sure thing” instead of an expensive shot in the dark.
Here’s one of our male vocalists, Jason, on a country ballad:
We have both male singers online and female singers online in almost any style a producer needs. If a producer needs a Jo Dee Messina style powerhouse modern country singer, they can Google “female country singer tracks online” and dial right into our site.
Pricing is reasonable and varies according to the singer’s experience; demand for their services; whether or not they do major label work and other factors.
Bass Guitar Tracks Online, Over The Internet Bass Tracks
Posted: April 10, 2014 Filed under: Now Tracking, Studio Services, Tracks Online | Tags: Ampeg SVT, Bass Guitar Tracks Online, Bass guitar tracks over the Internet, ender Precision Bass, Steve Whitaker Leave a commentBass guitar tracks online is our service that permits a person producing their own project at home or in a local studio to add a pro played bass guitar track to their production. Yes, it’s worth it, yes, it makes a big difference.
An order just in for our Bass Tracks Online service from Steve Whitaker who is having Nashville Trax record the first bass guitar track for a rock album cut. He’d already ordered the same track part from another service but was not happy with it, even after a modification.
Part of the problem was the playing itself, part was the track was “bottoming out” badly on the low notes. If we can make him happy, we’re in for all the bass tracks on the project.
Steve Whitaker 🙂
After receiving the two files (one with the bass track through an Ampeg SVT, the amplifier he requested be used, and one bass track of the same part except direct line, he asked for one note to be changed in the pre-chorus section. A one note fix and he’s ready to proceed with finishing his song only now he has a fantastic sounding bass guitar track as the foundation.
Then this, after the fix: ”
Great! Thank you for getting it did. 🙂
Should have a couple more songs ready for you soon.”
Steve
Update #2: This after the bass guitar track for a second song was completed over the Internet:
Track sounds great!! Thanks again. I’m on vacation for a month after this week and will be sending you as many as I can as fast as I can 🙂
Update 3 5-14-14: We have now almost completed ten bass guitar tracks, almost finished with Steve’s entire album!
“Got the bass tracks this morning and imported into PT.
They sound great, as always!!!”
Need professional sounding bass guitar tracks for an album over the Internet played by a professional session bass player? We do that! It’s this easy!.
The final product, Steve Whitaker’s album Edge of Oblivion, featuring Nashville Trax bass guitar parts on all songs, has been released!
Now Tracking: 2 Full band demos and some Tracks Online Projects In
Posted: April 10, 2014 Filed under: Christian, Now Tracking | Tags: James Fabriano, Ken Ishal, Musical Designs, Sibelius sheet music, Steve Whitaker.Of Fleas And Men, There's Only One Leave a commentWe just booked in a 15 page Sibelius sheet music printout from Musical Designs: a Christian tune titled There’s Only One. This is a pretty intense piece of music that will have the typical full band plus multiple background vocals, horns and more. Basically we are taking the notes and lyric from the sheet music and converting it into a fully fleshed out audio demo. We do have an mp3 with a flute playing melody to help. Our singer Lydia will be the vocalist.
We’re also working on multiple Tracks Online projects. Pedal Steel for a project Ken Ishal is producing. Pedal Steel for producer James Fabriano (distance means nothing with the Internet. James is doing Summer in September in Victoria, Australia. And a bass guitar track on a song titled Of Fleas And Men for producer Steve Whitaker, the third song on his album we’ve supplied bass for!
Also in: A song titled “Just For One Day” by divorce lawyer Vince Taylor about, what else? Divorce. Jennifer L will be the singer. This will be a full band demo.
Breaking News: Just Mixed! Check out B4 & After of Midnight Pardon.
Posted: April 9, 2014 Filed under: Now Tracking Leave a commentOur client’s “before” rough version:
Our “after” version:
Midnight Pardon is © 2014, Wayne Lewis, produced by Bill Watson. Used by permission. Intended for demonstration of production values only. All other uses prohibited under U.S. and International Copyright law. If you’re interested in recording or performing this song please let us know and we’ll forward your request to the songwriter and music publisher
Home Music Production Tips: Arranging Your Song And Choosing The Right Musicians
Posted: April 2, 2014 Filed under: Home Music Production, Studio Services | Tags: Bill Watson, Fiddle, Harmonica or Pedal Steel Online, Home Music Production, Home Recording, Mandolin or Violin Online, nashville trax recording studio, Saxophone Online, Vocal Tracks Online Over The Internet Leave a commentWant pro sounding, radio friendly productions? Tip #1: Use great players like David. Need more? Try these:
Fiddle, Mandolin or Violin Online
Music Production Tip:
How To Arrange Your Song and Choose the Right Musicians
Although I now produce music for Nashville Trax I started out years ago with a little 4 track cassette machine doing home recordings. I can relate to all the problems you’re experiencing in attempting to achieve a professional sound.
One area you’re almost certainly falling short in is musicianship.Back in the day I programmed a drum machine, played bass guitar, then added a couple guitar tracks, then played keyboards, sang, added background vocals and voila, a one man band!
It didn’t sound bad, in fact it was usually very good. I was a decent player, session quality on bass, and understood drumming to a degree. But there was no way I could play some of those instruments as well as a dedicated studio player who had focused on that one instrument for years, every day, eight to twelve hours a day.
No way could I, a hack keyboard player at best, get a sound out of a $500 keyboard that equaled the tone of a pro player’s $5,000 keyboard, let alone play it near as well. No way could me playing bass to a drum machine match up with a rhythm track created by a session quality live drummer and bassist. Drum machines or drum loops will never deliver the feel and expression of a live drummer playing a custom track on your song.
There are plenty of articles out there about how to mix, how to use EQ, etc. all saying “this is what you do to achieve a great sound”. but if you don’t have groove, pocket, pitch and the basic musical elements, you’ll tweak those knobs until ten days after the world explodes and never get that pro mix you’re looking for. Here’s my tip: Start with pro musicians. If you play, play your best instrument and hire the rest.
Not only will you have trouble making your $500 bass match up to the tone of a $5,000 professional grade instrument, unless you focus on bass guitar to the exclusion of almost everything else in your life, you’ll likely come up short on the performance: the tightness, the note selection, the groove! You most likely can’t and won’t deliver the definitive performance the song you labored over deserves.
If $350 microphones through a $500 preamp typical of the gear used in a home recording sounded as good as a $10,000 microphone through a $2.200 Avalon into $10,000 of software in a vocal chain, no one would buy a $10,000 mic or Avalon or expensive software. But they do. Think about it.
This shouldn’t discourage you, this should encourage you: Just like great quarterbacks don’t play defensive tackle, few people are a one man band and when you get to the “big leagues” of music, almost everyone is a specialist.
What I learned when I moved to Nashville is that live playing and session work are two very different animals; some people are born with a rare talent to play perfectly in pocket, all the time, every time. Many great live players who are good enough to play for major recording artists are not session quality players. So if you’re doing everything yourself, or using your live band’s local drummer to play on your tracks, it may be fun, it may sound “pretty good”, but it probably won’t give you a truly pro recording.
I do understand you want to produce your project at home or you wouldn’t be reading this post, you’d be reading the one that explains why the smartest thing may be to let me produce your track start to finish. You probably want to play on it, and I know you want your hands on the buttons. But strong caution: if you want a pro sound, if you want to truly compete with demos where specialists are involved in every step and hundreds of thousands of dollars of equipment are used, choose your best instrument or two and hire session quality players for the remainder. These days you can do that right over the Internet. Need a session quality drummer? Simply click here.
In fact, the rhythm section is a huge factor in determining how pro a recording will sound. If you play guitar and/or keys then I think you’d be wise to order a session quality drum and bass guitar track, then use that firm foundation to build on. Even better, hire out a basic rhythm section of rhythm guitar, drums and bass guitar, then build your project on that, adding acoustic guitar, keys, lead guitar and other instruments.
And if your song needs other instruments, they’re easy to add also!
Fiddle, Mandolin or Violin Online
Perhaps the biggest decision you’ll make on any song as a producer is choosing the right singer. In my opinion, the singer IS the song! You need a great one to put your song across. You know as well as I do that while you might “sing great” you aren’t the right choice for everything!
Keep this link in your back pocket: Vocal Tracks Online It may bail you out the next time you are trying to record a tune and know you don’t have quite the right singer available.
So back to my roots: after the 4 track it was 8 track reel-to-reel, then 16 track then 8 track digital, then two 8 track digital units midi’d as master/slave, then 16, then two 16 track digitals midi’d to make 32 tracks, a real 32 track digital machine and finally, the king daddy: Pro Tools HD. As I progressed through every configuration known to man, lol, I kept thinking, “Okay, so if I just had more tracks, then I could make this sound like the recordings they play on the radio.”
Guess what? Even with unlimited tracks and a state-of-the-art recording platform I still came up short. It’s probably not more tracks you need. In fact, it’s not any one thing, it’s almost everything! It’s skill, experience, musicianship, outboard gear, microphones, the rooms you record in, your mixing skills, your tracking skills, your experience with arranging, your musical knowledge, microphone placement…man, I could go on for days…okay, minutes at least, lol.
So if I could go back and talk to myself at the 4 track stage I’d tell myself what I’m going to tell you now: “Instead of chasing gear, learn to use what you have better, continually improve your skills at what you have a natural talent for, figure out what you do best, and interface with others who can fill in your weak areas.”
For most home producers, their greatest weakness, their biggest downfall, is mixing. They don’t have the experience, the room, the gear, the expertise, training or more importantly, the ears, to mix at a pro level. So even if you choose to do the one man band thing or hire local live quality musicians, you might want to consider hitting this link for your mix.
As far as arranging a song, the first hurdle is to be sure the songwriting is sound. If your chorus sounds almost indistinguishable from your verses you need to do some rewriting. Arrangement can certainly enhance chorus/verse separation but it shouldn’t have to carry the ball by itself! I may introduce a new instrument at the chorus but I want the note values in the melody or the number of bars on each chord…something inherent in the song structure, to change! If you play the song on acoustic guitar do listeners know when you hit the chorus?
Another good arranging tip: Cover the entire musical spectrum somewhat evenly. How even can vary song-to-song but if you have a ton of guitar tracks and other mid-range stuff, consider helping the cymbals out with a high pitched keyboard pat or a mandolin EQ’d to favor the high end, etc. panned to a different space in the mix than where you’re placing the cymbals. Typically the overheads are panned hard right and hard left so maybe place your mando at 2 o’ clock….experiment to see where it sounds best!
You also have to be very careful there aren’t any “dogfights” going on. That’s where the guitarist and the bass and the sax player are all trying to fill the same spot or worse, playing on top of the vocal. For the most part melodic fills should be played only in between vocal phrases and by only one instrument, unless two instruments are doubling the same part or playing in harmony.
So hopefully some of this helps you achieve higher quality recordings. I’d love to give you more but this post got long in the tooth quite a while ago. Thanks for hanging in and I look forward to giving you additional home producing tips in upcoming posts.- bill watson
How to Produce a Great Bass Guitar Sound for Recording
Posted: March 13, 2014 Filed under: Home Music Production, Studio Services | Tags: Avalon preamp, Bass Guitar Tracks Online, Hartke bass amp, Johnson Bass J-Station, Max Bass, Waves Bass Rider Plug In Leave a comment
Waves Bass Rider looks and ats identical to the vocal rider, it just operates at a different frequency.
Don’t make the mistake of thinking that if you play guitar, you “can throw a bass part on too, after all it’s only bass, right?” Wrong!The bass guitar track is the most critical part of a recording.
One quick and easy way to get a fantastic sounding bass track is to try this secret. It will give you great tone and an excellent performance without spending thousands of dollars to do it.
Another way is to use a high quality instrument and put your bass through processing before it gets to the mixing board. While plugging in to the board direct gives passable results, and for a few tunes might even be the best choice, it will never have the huge, robust bass sound featured on most major label recordings.
Bass players here at Nashville Trax use a variety of rigs but common to most Nashville session players is a quality bass guitar costing in the $1,000 and up range. Second, all bass players here use some sort of Avalon preamp before the signal is inputted to the XLR that routes to the mixing board. The 737 works well, but the Avalon U5 is THE bass preamp almost every session player has in their rig.
When I play bass on a session I feed my Fender Precision or Washburn bass signal into the Avalon pre-amp. Sometimes I’ll use the compression built into the Avalon and sometimes I’ll use an outboard compressor. This provides the nice deep, tight, round tone needed and many songs and achieved by all session players. Often I’ll run a dual line through a bass guitar amp and put on a microphone on that so I’m recording two signals at once (of the same same part). This gives tone options at mixdown.
After recording there is software made specifically for bass that I commonly employ during the mixing phase. The Waves”bass rider” plug in (see photo above) acting like an automatic fader rider, helps even out any volume fluctuations without further compressing the signal. Max Bass generates super deep bass signals not present in the bass itself that can be added as desired to the original bass signal to create a solid bass tone. EQ and additional compression are typically used, but note that if you’re happy with what you’re hearing and it’s working with the other instruments and supports the song, you may not need all these plugs.
So should you play bass parts yourself? If you are really a bass player, not a converted guitarist who really doesn’t get the concept of the bass guitar’s function, I’d say no, don’t do it. The other caution would be that even if you are a great bass player, Nashville abounds with players who are awesome. play major label artist gigs and have a bass in their hands all the time but can’t break into the session scene because recording is an entirely different animal than live playing. So you may not be capable of delivering true session quality bass tracks.
In both those scenarios. I wouldn’t necessarily recommend purchasing a new bass, preamp and associated software because with the knowledge of how to play the right notes for the song tight in the pocket, all that would simply be a waste of money. In that situation it may be better and far cheaper to hire a professional bass player for $75–
So one of these methods will absolutely give you the bass sound you need to achieve pro results- b.e. watson
Now Tracking: 2 Brand New Songs by Michael Jackson
Posted: March 12, 2014 Filed under: Now Tracking | Tags: music producer Bill Watson, new songs by Michael Jackson Leave a commentWe know what you’re thinking: Isn’t Michael Jackson …. how do we say this….no longer with us?
Apparently not!
He just ordered two song demos, one titled Move On and another titled Four Bottles. The song roughs have provided a great direction we can run with and bring to fruition. Four Bottles in particular, has a great concept. We expect our music producer Bill Watson to start charting the week of 4-14 and have the rhythm tracks, vocals and overdubs recorded the following week.
Actually these two demos are the fourth and fifth Michael has had us produce in the last six months.
We do have to mention there’s a strong possibility that Michael may not be the same slightly more famous MJ who happens to share his name.
Now Tracking Song 1 of a 3 Song Project
Posted: March 11, 2014 Filed under: Now Tracking | Tags: Alive, Beatles, Dabid Northrup, Pinl Floyd. Rob Cronaccio Leave a comment3 songs are confirmed to be produced for songwriter Robert Cornacchio from Long Island, NY. and his two co-writers, James Hoffman and Rich DiGeorge.
The roughs have Beatles and Pink Floyd influences but, as requested by the songwriting trio, we’re going to produce them with an eye toward the Nashville market.
First up is a tune titled Alive- b.e.
Update: Alive is finished. To hear how it turned out click here.
How To Get A Great Kick Drum Sound
Posted: March 4, 2014 Filed under: Studio Services | Tags: Avalon VT 737SP, NashvilleTrax Tracks Drum Tracks Online, ShurePG52 Leave a commentThere are two basic ways to get a great kick drum sound for recording:
2. The slightly harder and more expensive way.
I’ll assume that you have a great drummer lined up because tone and even signal levels on each hit has as much to do with the player as the gear it’s played through.
Hopefully you also have a decent quality bass drum. Most of the time you’ll want to pud a blanket or some sort of padding inside the drum. You don’t want to muffle it too much or eliminate all resonance, you just want to experiment until your drummer hits the drum and you get a deep, solid punchy thud. If it sounds like someone knocking on a door try tuning the head to get a deeper sound, if possible, note that some kick drums simply don’t sound that good. It might help to place the kit in the corner of a room, facing toward the room’s center.
Once you have the drum sounding the way you want it, a microphone designed to record those low frequencies is essential. We use a Shure PG52. Place it like this:
Even straight into the board that should give you a reasonably good sounding kick drum track. If you want it to be awesome, run it through a preamp/compressor. We use an Avalon VT 737SP set for bass drum.
If you try all this and you aren’t happy I can guarantee you it’s not the Avalon or the Shure PG52 that’s the problem. It resides in your drummer or in the kick drum. Keep experimenting and eventually you’ll make it happen. If you fail or rather, tire of experimenting Nashville Trax does offer drum tracks played by a studio pro session player as well as vocal tracks, piano tracks, bass guitar, you name it you can add to your project. Visit the link and check the menu under the word “MORE” in the upper right corner. b.e. watson
Great Day of Tracks Online Work At Nashville Recording Studios
Posted: February 21, 2014 Filed under: Now Tracking, Studio Services, Tracks Online | Tags: Banjo Tracks Online, Jenee Fleenor, Mike Duchette, Nashville music producer Bill Watson, nashville trax recording studio, piano tracks online, Sir Ronald Fairchild, steel guitar tracks online, The Oak Ridge Boys Leave a comment
Our fiddle player, Jenee Fleenor solos at a Martina McBride concert. Jenee is available through Fiddle Tracks Online to play on your song, just one of the many world class players on our roster!
A great day of work for our new service, Tracks Online, which offers self-producers high quality instrument tracks over the Internet.
First a 10 a.m. at Nashville Trax Recording Studio to record four tracks of Mike Duchette Steel Guitar Tracks Online and two tracks of harmonica.
Then it was off to our Pro Tools HD sister studio in Hendersonville, TN to produce seven tracks of piano and strings played by The Oak Ridge Boys long time band member, Sir Ronald Fairchild, for our Piano Tracks Online service on a project for a client in Quebec, Canada.
Just in time too, Ron had to catch the band bus to the airport at 4 a.m. for a flight to play at an Oaks performance in Puerto Rico. Five star hotels, a one day paid layover to do some sightseeing, catered food, all to do a one hour show…hey it’s a tough life but somebody has to live it!
Finally, caught up!
Until returning to the studio where a Banjo Tracks Online order had just been confirmed via e-mail. The client’s mp3 will arrive in a few hours. Love it!- b.e.
Need an instrument track? Saxophone? Harmonica? Dobro? Mandolin? Nashville music producer Bill Watson will choose the perfect session player to add to your mp3 mix and send it back as a high quality .wav file that will lock up perfectly for your mix and give you exactly what you need to make an impressive, spectacular song demo or master!







