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Greener
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PostPosted: Wed May 07, 2008 12:30 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Hi all,
Let me explain my situation a little then ask a few questions I have sorta floating around in my head.
I'm a drummer, have been for more than half my life. I grew up playing heavy metal and because of this I have a rough heavy sound. I can keep a beat no problems.
I play in a blues rock band with a few mates. The lead guitarist has an amazing ability to ramble on in a fresh bluesy rhythm. The bass guitarist can hold a groove.
We jamb regularly but only in an improvised way. One of us starts a groove and the others join in, some 15-30 minutes later we have a break for beer and cigarettes. Mostly the groove lasts the entire session.
I am currently recording these jambs with a single room mic and just saving the single track to listen back to and see what sounds cool to me and so forth.

Now, this is where I'm at.
What I want to know is where I should spend some money if I want to do the following...
I have 5 hours of these improv sessions which I want to cut into individual tracks. What's a good way of doing it?
I want to spend some money on getting a better sound for the guys in the band. I play loud and there small amps can't cope. Is getting a PA system and a power amp and mic'ing everything up a good way to get louder?
I want to make a lot more noise and record more than a single track or at least be able to mix the sound levels from different parts of my kit and the guitars and vocals/ranting so things sound better when I record.

I have spoken to the guys at the music stores around town and they really only try to sell me stuff not explain what I will need.

Thanks in advance.

\Also what's a good way for me to put some of what we've recorded up online to share?
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Codemonkey
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PostPosted: Wed May 07, 2008 7:16 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Where the hell do you jam? Somewhere that will take a PA, drumkit and guitar amps and not annoy the neighbours?

"I want to make a lot more noise"
No offence, but that's funny coming from a heavy metal drummer.

What kind of budget could you have to work with? Ballpark figure even.

Unless you have some huge kit that spans the width of a freeway (imagine the tom runs...) then 2 mics or even 1 will do a good job of picking up the kit. A single mic on each guitar amp works.

So however many mics you need, you can either get something that will let you record all these separately - a computer interface (with multiple inputs) or a recorder; or you could get a mixer, play about with the levels and record an output from that.

As for your existing stuff, Audacity will let you split stuff up into sections I think. Export each as its own mp3/whatever.

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Greener
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PostPosted: Thu May 08, 2008 11:50 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Hey I know my initial post was vague to say the least.
I play in someones living room, with neighbors all around so making it louder currently would be impossible.
However, as a band we are looking at renting some studio space with no noise restrictions which is why I'm keen to gear up to make more noise.
As for mic-ing up the guitar amps and my kit I have nfi where to look for information.
Same goes for pre-amps for the mics and a mixer.
I have around AU$6000 to spend.
I currently have a decent laptop and an Edirol UA-25 with 2 inputs. And I'm happy to just record only 2 tracks I suppose if I can get the levels right and combine channels before recording (is this possible?)
Currently I record on a single mic and I get the levels by moving amps and the kit around the room. (slow and annoying).
Bonus side, Saturday nights jamb produced 4 tracks, 28mins. Enough for me to say we cut a mini-LP. Yet to sell it though.
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bent
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PostPosted: Thu May 08, 2008 5:32 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Welcome to RO!

Many of the answers you seek lay in the pages of this site.

Search it and narrow down your questions - take note of the fact that the forum is broken up into many distinct areas.

I'm moving this thread to an area more suitable as it really doesn't have anything to do with the business side of this here industry...

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BobRogers
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PostPosted: Thu May 08, 2008 6:23 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

I can't figure out any intelligent advice, so let me pose some questions -

1. Is recording improv sessions with this band the ultimate goal? What comes after this?

2. Are there local recording studios where you would be comfortable jamming and would be attractively priced?

3. How good are the recordings you have already made? Is this a test run or something that you definitely want to preserve?

4. Are you more into playing or more into recording? Do you see recording as something that is fun/interesting or its own or are you just doing it because it is the "affordable" way to get a CD of your jams.

The basic idea here is that there are are several levels that you can get into this. For very little money you can improve your direct to two track recordings and either edit them yourselves or have a pro do it for you. Or you can go into a studio and let them record you. Or you can spend a big chunk of money and do the whole thing in your house. The choice depends on your goals and interest which isn't apparent to me yet (and maybe not to you).
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Codemonkey
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PostPosted: Thu May 08, 2008 6:39 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Sometimes it never will be apparent. I dunno where our Church band is going, but I know that I'm going to get a Delta1010LT at some point, and make recordings with that, and later add some real processing power (not a 1.6GHz P4). And then, when I can properly record, I'll see how we move from there.

What you need is to define a rough goal, try and come up with 2 or 3 specific goals you want to achieve after that and find a way to get there.

In my case, I want to see the band go somewhere and for a start, improve the recording quality. After that, I want to either: make multi-track recordings of the band, like a small studio would do OR make multi-track live recordings. I might do both. So I want to get a bit of gear that works for me, and all I need now is the cash.

Most bands want to get big, but maybe you'll just want to make recordings of how it is now.
(But believe me, once you get your feet wet, you'll want to go swimming)
If you can, talk over it as a band - do you want to become more than jammers? If you go gigging, a good idea is to get a demo - and you could either get some studio time, or do it with your own gear - which could be where you want to start.
But, don't commit to something if you don't feel confident enough.

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casper
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PostPosted: Thu May 08, 2008 7:57 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Greener since you have the laptop and edirol interface I would look at getting a mixer. Yamaha MG line is really good and not to expensive. Mackie is pretty good too. The easiest way to setup would be instruments>mics>mixer>edirol (stereo in)>laptop.
The mics:guitar either a Shure sm57 or a senheiser E609. The bass you can go direct or mic the amp depends on what you like. If you need vocals Sure Sm58 or 57 will work or whatever your preference. The drum mics Im not familiar with but if you serch the forum I amsure you can find ome good sugestions. Typically 1-4 mics. Close micing should give you pretty decent results. Sometimes you have to control the sound some moving blankets carefully placed can help.

Later if you want to spend the money you can look into an 8 channel + firewire audio interface with mic pres. This option gives you the ability to record and mix each track indavidually. You can edit each instrument on seperate tracks. You will be able to incorporate all the equipment you used before.

Audacity or if the Edirol came with some recording software Id just use that.

So pretty much your looking at cables, mics and a mixer. I would go for some headphones and even a headphone amp so you can all monitor as you record. When you get it together mostly you will find yourself moving mics, equipment around, and adjusting mixer and levels to get a good sound. It takes some experimentation.

Also, checkout this site it has lots of good recording related info:

http://www.tweakheadz.com/guide.htm
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malamikigo
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PostPosted: Fri May 09, 2008 11:58 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Seeing as you're a metal drummer playing in a blues band, i have my doubts that the problem lies with their amps being too quiet.

Some of these ought to help the situation:


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Greener
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PostPosted: Sat May 10, 2008 9:09 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Thank you guys,
As BobRogers said and was correct I'm not really sure what direction I want to head in.
The reason I started recording our sessions was just to preserve it as something to show my grandkids one day.
That's how it started. Where it's going to end who knows, it's like I'm addicted to recording stuff now.
I'm seriously keen on getting a drum mic pack so I can capture all the sound from my kit, when I use sticks and pound all you can hear from the area mic is me (doesn't worry me much, annoys the band though) and when I use bamboo pole thingies or brushes you can't hear me at all, lack of win all 'round. So yeah. Micing up the kit time. Seems I need a Kick, snare and overheads. Dunno what brand though. I'm keen to get a good kick mic because I tune my kick drum with two full skins (no hole in the front) for maximum boom.
I looked at and heard the Sure mics at a local store and they are fantastic (dear as poison but I'm guessing I'd get what I'd pay for).
Still have no idea what size mixer to get. I think I should get it last after I've figured out how many mics I need.
The speaker system i'm looking at is mostly Behringer. I was drooling over a pair of Behringer 900W 2X 15" with horns and a Behringer E1800X 18" sub. Anyone know anything more about these that a product description doesn't mention? I can't find a decent review from someone not trying to sell it to me.
That just leaves an amp. I was thinking just one big amp. Really big because I might want to add to the 3600watts worth of speakers in the future.

As for going to the local recording studio, it's either waaaay to expensive or just a smelly room with a limp PA in it.

Anyways, thanks for all the input from you guys.
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Codemonkey
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PostPosted: Sat May 10, 2008 11:28 am Reply with quoteBack to top

"I can't find a decent review"
That's because it's Behringer, and if the sales reps aren't pushing it, noone is likely to say anything remotely good about it.

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Space
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PostPosted: Sat May 10, 2008 4:11 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Rather then use those "bamboo pole thingies", get a handful of thai sticks. It's a win/win/when ya coming home situation!!
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