TIME TO RECORD YOUR OWN MUSIC?
Is your only option for recording your vocals to hire an engineer for each song you write? That’s going to cost you.
What if you want to write and record your own songs and release a LOT more music on your own time and dime?
Are you hearing about others collaborating with producers and forming hot new projects, but you feel stuck behind a lack of a skill set?
Moreover, do you crave connection with other cool, supportive artists who understand what you're going through? Do you desire extra motivation and accountability?
Yet somehow, you still experience:
YOU'VE DABBLED WITH TRYING TO TEACH YOURSELF
Resistance
Falling short
There's a sense of overwhelm with what to do and in what order. You lose large chunks of time going down internet rabbitholes trying to piece together information.
You’re singing off key, running out
of breath, feeling fatigued, and your throat starts feeling dry and itchy.
You can’t deliver what you or a producer asks for and you spiral down a hole of frustration.
You don’t even know that you could have a better mix in your headphones to support your singing, since you don’t know what you don’t know. The magic’s not there. You’ve got to settle for less than what you’re truly able to deliver and you wrap up feeling discouraged and regretful.
Self-doubt
Imposter syndrome? You constantly battle your inner critic who pops up to challenge your identity as a singer who can record and produce their own vocals.
But there's a better way.
You can experience...
Confidence
and excitement
Professionalism
You’ve worked out the kinks in your delivery beforehand, practiced your mic technique, and know how to best set yourself up in the booth
and communicate with the engineer.
You nail your takes and finish early, which enables you to try extra creative ideas that could hold a secret sauce for your artist identity.
You walk away proud.
Control and focus
You’re relaxed and in the zone.
You’re able to give multiple varied takes with leads, harmonies,
and ad libs that are the true feeling
of the song. There’s less to edit afterwards, which saves you money (and improves your reputation).
A typical budget for one radio-ready mastered track ranges from $1000-$5000.