Making a Hit with (Almost) Nothing – Recreating A Little Respect with the Lewitt MTP 5

 

Enter The Giveaway Of The Lewitt MTP 5: https://gleam.io/rmEBk/lewitt-audio-mtp-5-giveaway

Download The Multitracks: https://producelikeapro.lpages.co/erasure-a-little-respect-form/

Recreating A Little Respect with the Lewitt MTP 5

There is something beautifully liberating about stripping things back to the essentials and proving that great music is not about price tags, it is about people, taste, and decisions.

In this session, I set out to do exactly that. The goal was simple. Take an inexpensive handheld dynamic microphone, the Lewitt MTP 5, pair it with largely stock virtual instruments, and recreate the magic of A Little Respect by Erasure.

What followed was a powerful reminder of what really matters in music production.

The Concept: Remove the Excuses

At this point, most of us have access to incredible tools straight out of the box. Whether it is Logic, Ableton, or Pro Tools, the virtual instruments alone are enough to make fully realised productions.

So I wanted to answer a question we all already know the answer to:

Can you make a great record with affordable gear?

Yes. Absolutely.

In this case:

The only truly analogue elements were:

Everything else lived inside the box.

The Secret Ingredient: People

Before we get into the technical side, let’s be clear about something.

Gear does not make records. People do.

That combination is where the magic starts.

You can give ten people the same tools and get ten completely different results. The difference is always taste, experience, and musicality.

Dynamic Mics on Acoustic Guitar? Absolutely.

There is a long-standing myth that you need expensive condensers to record acoustic guitar.

In reality, dynamic microphones can sound fantastic.

I discovered this years ago working on a film project, recording a Yamaha acoustic with a Shure SM57. The reaction? “What are you using? That sounds great.”

That lesson stuck.

So here, the MTP 5 pulls double duty:

And it holds up beautifully.

Building the Foundation: Groove First

One of the reasons A Little Respect works so well is its groove.

This is where it connects directly to classic soul and Motown. Everyone is playing the same rhythmic figure. The synth, the bass, the guitar, they are all locked into one idea.

That unity creates momentum.

The main synth part is the song. Everything else supports it.

To enhance that:

The goal is consistency, not flash.

Bass: Width Meets Weight

The bass approach is a great example of modern thinking applied to a classic feel.

Split into two roles:

Processing included:

Result:
A bass that moves in stereo, however hits dead centre where it counts.

Drums: Simple, Effective, Musical

The drum programming stays true to the era, simple, punchy, and direct.

Key ideas:

That last point is important.

Instead of making hi-hats brighter, making them thicker gives them presence without harshness. A little saturation goes a long way.

The Lewitt MTP 5 on Vocals

Here is where things get really interesting.

The vocal chain is almost shockingly simple:

That is it.

No elaborate processing. No endless tweaking.

And the raw mic signal? Already solid.

This is the real takeaway:
A good dynamic microphone in the right hands does the job.

Arrangement Over Production Tricks

One of the most inspiring aspects of this song is its arrangement.

Unlike many modern productions, it does not rely on constant layering or dramatic changes to signal a chorus.

Instead:

That is classic songwriting craft.

It is the same principle you hear in great records from The Beatles. The arrangement carries the song forward.

So What Does This Prove?

This entire exercise reinforces something I have believed for years:

You are not limited by your gear.

What matters is:

Give a great singer a modest mic, they still sound great.
Give a great song a simple production, it still connects.

Final Thoughts

The Lewitt MTP 5 proved itself to be a versatile, reliable tool. However the bigger story here is not the microphone.

It is the reminder that:

At the end of the day, everything you need to make a record is already within reach.

The rest is down to you.

Have a marvellous time recording and mixing.

Enter The Giveaway Of The Lewitt MTP 5: https://gleam.io/rmEBk/lewitt-audio-mtp-5-giveaway

Download The Multitracks: https://producelikeapro.lpages.co/erasure-a-little-respect-form/

Exit mobile version