M
mxracer591
New member
Hey all, I'm new here... but not completely new to the whole home recording thing. I've been in bands for the past 10 years, and I usually end up being the one running the mixer and whatnot for our live sound, so naturally when we want to do a demo, I'm usually the one behind the controls. Basically everything I know I've learned from different places around the internet. I have three questions right now as we are thinking about doing another demo somewhat shortly. What I have for equipment is a basic set of microphones, they are all halfway decent... but nothing super special, a mackie 8 channel mixer (I think it's 8), and my laptop. My first question is, my mixer has a usb output, is there anyway to take the mix on my mixer and get that onto my laptop with each channel being it's own seperate track? The main reason I want to do this is for further editing on the drums, we play metal, so obviously a completely natural sounding drum set doesn't really fit the bill for what we need. The other question is based on hoping there is a way to record each channel to it's own track, when recording the bass drum, I've heard that you can get a pretty solid, consistent, clicky bass drum sound out of mic'ing the bass drum as opposed to triggers. I have the module set up to trigger, just not an actual working trigger (mine broke). What are some good eq settings for that metal bass drum sound? compressor settings? any other fx? third question is, can i get away with recording the drums with no condensors for overheads? I have a 5 piece set, 2 crashes, hi hats, ride, china, a bell and a splash. I believe we have 8 dynamic microphones. if I put a dynamic mic on each group of cymbals, will that ever sound decent? is there anything "special" I can do to make it sound better? Thanks in advance for the help!