video-bg The importance of a click-track

The importance of a click-track

Whether you are working on a piece single-handedly or in collaboration with others, as a musician, you will come across a click track at some point. So, what is a click-track? It’s an audio track, with beats at regular intervals, that you can hear as you would when a metronome is played, as well as visualize when looking at the waveform.

So, why not use a metronome itself? Why is a click track indispensable? It’s simple :

  1. A metronome will play your rhythm, at a particular tempo, time signature, etc., which is fixed through the duration of your song. So if you wanted to change your style in the middle of the song, from one rhythm to another, or change the pace of a song to a slower tempo, or a faster one, your metronome may not be able to help you with that. Here is where, your click track, is flexible enough, allowing changes in tempo and time signature as required, at the exact bar or point in the timeline.
  2. Once you’ve finished recording one track, and need to sync it with another track or multiple tracks, recorded by you, or someone else, the easiest way to do it, is by actually looking at the waveform and lining up the cliffs and low points together across tracks. Say, for example, the chords of a piano with the beats of the drum or the slap on the bass guitar. Now you can only do this if you can visualize the click on a track, something that a metronome was not designed to do. Metronome only gives an audible output, so unless you route that to a track and have it recorded, you cannot use it for edits based on sight, once you do record it, it becomes your click-track!

Of the two points above, the second one is much more important, in that, when collaborating remotely, each musician needs to still sync up with the rest of the group, when starting new sections in the song, or playing their solos over other’s backing, hence this particular track is of vital importance. When a vocalist, for example,  expressively extends notes, the rest of the band should still be able to move together without missing a beat, otherwise, any tension built up by the vocalist loses its impact. Delivering on the beat has its own value.

Now, it is common, that a particular track may be recorded more than once, as the artist may feel that one part of the section sounds better in one track, while another section sounds good in subsequent recordings of the same track. In this case, it is common to cut and paste tracks from various sources, so that the audio sounds good. Bear in mind, when doing this, if you don’t align each cut the track to the cue points on the original click track, the next musician who needs to work with your track will find it very hard to accompany your track. Remember, all your tracks need to be aligned with each other for a tight piece.

It is good practice, to have the lead musician design the click track, with its various changes and cue points, for others than letting each musician individually figure out where the changes occur. Every guess has its inbuilt error which leads to subsequent avoidable rework. It is better in this case to get it right the first time than learn from mistakes.

I hope this helps most performing musicians understand the elementary aspects of being a studio musician and helps make music more fun.

Santosh Baynes
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