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Sound Recording and Reproduction
Recording (live or studio)
Audio Interface or Mixer?
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[QUOTE="Boswell, post: 228879, member: 29034"] For playing live you need a mixer that will take your mic and other channels and mix them down to 2-track for FOH and also produce a set of monitor mixes for the performers. You need instant access to individual channel faders and you may want to add in effects at the same time. This setup is the function of an external mixer and is something that cannot usefully be done in a PC, even those equipped with a "control surface". For recording only (no live mix), you can either take the outputs of all the preamps and feed them via a multichannel interface into a PC to make a multitrack disk file for later mixdown, or you can use a dedicated multitrack hard disk recorder and mix down from that. In the case that you are making a recording while doing a live gig, it is a matter of doing both of the above at the same time. There are variants, e.g. you can take the direct channel outs of the live mixer for recording, or you could split the signals at the microphone level and have two separate amplification chains. Note that I have not distinguished between the use of analog and digital mixers here, in that the principles of use are similar and the same overall arguments apply. However, the new generation of FireWire-equipped mixers has opened up another possibility, viz. the live mixer digitising the signals and sending them to the PC via FireWire while running full FOH and monitor mixes. The newer Mackie range of mixers comes to mind here. With previous digital mixers (Yamaha "0" range, for example), you can take digital outputs for recording via ADAT and send them to a hard disk recorder, but to record multitrack to a PC, you needed one or more ADAT interface cards in the PC. So for what you say you want to do and at a reasonable cost, I would recommend a PC and FireWire-equipped mixer. [/QUOTE]
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Forums
Sound Recording and Reproduction
Recording (live or studio)
Audio Interface or Mixer?
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