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I've been recording music for a while now usually just using one mic and whatever mixer i can borrow. Now i'm looking at an upgrade. I'm looking for 8 XLR inputs and i want to be able to record separate tracks (ie; when recording drums there is a snare track, bass drum, overhead etc.) Currently i have a Yamaha MW12cx with Cubase AI4 and I haven't figured out, if at all possible to get what I need.

Any suggestions, or tips would be greatly appreciated :)

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Guitarfreak Sat, 06/13/2009 - 17:29

quigolo wrote: when i open a new project in cubase, what kind of project should it be.

Somebody else is going to have to answer this, because I'm not a Cubase user.

quigolo wrote: and when i set a certain track to record, should i set more than one? what else could it be?..

Not sure I follow, but I think you are a bit confused. You are definitely going to have to use more than one track to get the full effect. You need to designate one track for each input if you want to tweak them later.

TheJackAttack Sat, 06/13/2009 - 17:39

Within Cubase you have to create a project with the number of individual tracks you wish to record. Then you have to select which mixer stick will go to that track. If you select stereo main or equivalent then you will be recording the mains to every track.

RTFM. No really. Page 10 and following. I don't use Cubase so I can't give you a blow by blow but I just downloaded the manual in two seconds and found the pertinent pages.

Essentially you are duplicated the physical mixer in the virtual world of your computer.

Guitarfreak Sat, 06/13/2009 - 17:42

Sigh, and you were ready to throw down some money on expensive equipment to fix your problems? Well I'm glad you came here first.

I'm not a Cubase user, but all DAW's function on the same principle; audio in/audio out. You need to set your USB device as the input device, which it sounds like you've already done because you've got some kind of signal. I doubt your USB device will allow you to simultaneously record a full drumset though, but that's why I linked you to a nice piece of FireWire.

When you create a new track it will ask you the usual mono/stereo gibberish, just make it mono because I doubt any of your mics are stereo unless you have a stereo room mic set up. Then you will benefit greatly if you choose an input for said track. Something like Input 1, Input 2 and so on. These inputs correlate to an XLR input on your device, it's basically telling your computer where to fish the audio from. Smart huh? :D

When you've got all the inputs selected and levels set (that's another thread completely) you are ready to record. Push the button and.....GO!