M
Mike Freze
New member
Hi Again! Need advice on one more thing.
I have an electric keyboard I use for recording as well as a digital drum box )external hardware device).
I know I can record my keyboard with my midi cables and send it through my midi interface to record a midi track in my project. Sometimes I have done this along with my audio tracks with other instruments and vocals.
Is there an advantage to recording the keyboard in real time to an audio track instead of midi so everything in my project has audio tracks to work with from the start?
I am thinking of micing my midi instruments (keyboard and drum machine) by sending the signal out to my amp and then micing the amp speaker. Of course, this makes the midi recording audio right off the bat. But can you get a richer, fuller, liver, more realistic sound with more depth in terms of tonal quality and frequency ranges by doing it this way? I have good quality speakers with a good quality amp. I can't see where recording a midi instrument as a midi track (binary codes only) and then attempting to add effects, EQs, etc. later on that is synthesized can possibly compare in sound quality to the real deal with a good amp, speakers, and a good microphone. Am I right? Some people have said that there is no comparison because computerized sounds (VST instruments, software synths) can never quite duplicate that live, expensive equipment to record with.
Advice anyone?
Mike Freze
I have an electric keyboard I use for recording as well as a digital drum box )external hardware device).
I know I can record my keyboard with my midi cables and send it through my midi interface to record a midi track in my project. Sometimes I have done this along with my audio tracks with other instruments and vocals.
Is there an advantage to recording the keyboard in real time to an audio track instead of midi so everything in my project has audio tracks to work with from the start?
I am thinking of micing my midi instruments (keyboard and drum machine) by sending the signal out to my amp and then micing the amp speaker. Of course, this makes the midi recording audio right off the bat. But can you get a richer, fuller, liver, more realistic sound with more depth in terms of tonal quality and frequency ranges by doing it this way? I have good quality speakers with a good quality amp. I can't see where recording a midi instrument as a midi track (binary codes only) and then attempting to add effects, EQs, etc. later on that is synthesized can possibly compare in sound quality to the real deal with a good amp, speakers, and a good microphone. Am I right? Some people have said that there is no comparison because computerized sounds (VST instruments, software synths) can never quite duplicate that live, expensive equipment to record with.
Advice anyone?
Mike Freze