StringSection Blog

Posts Tagged ‘session violinist’

Recording Upper Strings for Leigh Haggerwood

Friday, August 26th, 2011

On Sunday I got together once again with composer Leigh Haggerwood to record some violin and viola parts for some of his new music. Last year, we had worked with Leigh on his Florin Street Band project and it was great to catch up with him.

As this time the brief was purely to supply some solo vioiln and viola lines, I was the only musician present and therefore we were able to record at Leigh’s own studio. As usual, the melodies were memorable with terrific string parts which blended skilfully with the other instrumental parts in the track. I’m looking forward to hearing the finished result!

Photograph courtesy of Leigh Haggerwood

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Keeping it real?

Monday, January 17th, 2011

A few weeks ago, we were asked to provide strings for a pop track where the band had written their own string arrangements and required us in the studio to just record the written parts. The session went well and everyone was happy with the finished recording but on the way out, the cellist and I were discussing a phenomenon which we’d noticed in this and other recordings. Namely that when a composer or songwriter produces a lot of music using synthesised or sampled string parts, their ear becomes naturally accustomed to this sound and they instinctively try to get the real strings in the studio to sound more like samples!

To us, as players this seems slightly strange as all the natural inflections, subtleties, articulations, dynamics and phrasing are what make real strings sound so good and stand out to lift a track to a new level. The engineers / producers / composers who don’t work with real instruments often try to iron all these little varieties out, so that the strings sound very smooth and lifeless - in other words it’s like looking at a photograph of a woman who has been airbrushed, it may be ‘perfect’ but any character or individuality has been lost.

Recording Violin and Viola parts

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

On Friday, we had the pleasure of recording some violin and viola parts for a composer who had already recorded the cello parts himself. As he hadn’t heard his composition performed on real instruments before, it was a pleasure to hear the music unfolding - one layer at a time.

One of the skills require in overlayering parts to an existing track is keeping a very accurate rhythm. It would only require one part to be rhythmically unstable for the whole track to sound uneven, so it is vital to make sure that every take is absolutely perfect. In a real ensemble situation, players have lots of subtle non-verbal cues between them and when these are missing in a studio situation, it is a matter of remembering exactly where the phrasing and speed alter in the minutest detail.

In the case of this composition, there were accelerandos which occurred over several bars as well as many changes of tempo. It is possible to record by stopping at each tempo change and editing but as we only had an allotted time of two hours, working swiftly was of the essence and therefore we did each individual layer in a single take. This meant that the changes of tempo had to be smooth and precise.

Due to extraneous noise around the recording studio caused by some building work in the vicinity (which nobody could have predicted!) the whole project did run over time  a little, but the composer was absolutely delighted with the end result - which hopefully brought his composition to life.

Recording a suite for strings

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

On Sunday, we recorded a wonderful suite of pieces by the talented composer Philip Henderson. Assembled in MBJ studios were myself on violin, one violist, a cellist and double bassist to record (with the use of accurate overdubbing), works written for the combination of 10 solo strings. One of the challenges of the day was to try and judge how much music we could record whilst maintaining the very highest level of playing which would do the pieces justice. On one hand, we needed to best utilise having four musicians together to cover the maximum amount of music (potentially 5 tracks, amounting to over 30 minutes of music), but it was vital to maintain an excellent quality of playing.

It was an enormous help to have the composer present as he could give us a very clear idea of how he wanted certain passages to sound and bring out the qualities he was looking for. With quite a lot of subtle shifts in tempo and phrasing and some quite tricky passages, we had all anticipated that the whole suite might even take a further day to complete - however it soon became clear that with the super efficient recording work by engineer Ben Jones, our motivation to get as much recorded as possible and crucially the input from Philip, all five tracks were able to be recorded.

We began by recording violin 5 with viola 2, cello 2 and double bass - and found that it took around 3 hours of recording before the double bass parts were complete. A further three hours and violin 4, viola 1 and cello 1 parts were complete. Then 3 more hours were needed to record the violins 3,2 and 1 parts for the first 3 movements of the work. The process consisted of building up from the bottom so that we could keep a tight rein on tuning as well as making the foundation for each track rhythmically perfect.

Any rhythmic untidiness will only become exaggerated with each overdub so there is a real skill in recording this way. We are all looking forward to hearing the end result as Philip Henderson has created some music of real scope which had quite a moving effect on all the musicians involved.