Maybe I wasn't clear enough - it's the basic track I'm wndering about. The track I lay all the rest on top of. I'm just not all that sure what to put on it, or if I even need a basic track. I actually have a book that has the scores for the original, but as I said, I don't want to redo it. It is...
I put this in here because I'm not sure where else to put it.
Anyway, I'm recording a tribute to the White Album, and here's my question. The next song I'm due to do is Revolution 9. As most will know this is a 7 minute mayhem basically. A mixing experiment with tape loops, backwards recordings...
Anyone have any ideas how I can edit a sitar in MIDI? I mean like program one, like a drum kit, but a sitar. Anyone know of a program that has one or anything?
I'm just using Garageband. It has an a'ight MIDI interface, but you can only program in musical notation. You can do it in the standard appearance of musical notation, or you can do it in sorta "row view" with one note per row and position your notes on that.
My question is: since I cannot...
Basically, anything that you read in tablature, but can only program in musical notation. How would I do this? Is there a guide somewhere that will translate show the notes for every position on the bass guitar? Or what? How would you do it?
I'm programming MIDI drums on the computer, from a book that has them for the song in question. But... the book says 53 bars, but the original song is somehwere around 67 bars. I don't get it. This book always does this. For the two times I've copied drums from it, they were always off. Last...
I did it. I tried just playing it in front of the B-1 first, and it sounds quite nice. So the simplest method turned out to work. I was gonna say be the best, but since that worked I haven't tried the other way. I don't have anything smaller than the pencil mics, so it might be tough to find...
Wow. That's a long description. Thanks. I'm finishing the guitar, then I'll either overdub the harmonica or the lead vocal. When I'm ready to do the harmonica, I'll read over it again.
I am playing a diatonic, a C if it matters. The song is Love Me Do by The Beatles. It's a sappy song I know...
Ok, I'm recording a harmonica. I'd like to know what people's thoughts are on recording them. My idea is to do it like a vocal, just set up my B-1 and play it? Or is there another way to do it.
This is one of those questions where I admit I can't see what other answers anyone might give, but...
I fixed the problem, but they still don't match up. I'm able to sing the song correctly along with the drums and it matches up perfectly. But the original track is still signifigantly shorter.
And two books agree it's 84, so I'm not sure what they did wrong...
I'm recording Love Me Do at the moment :rolleyes:
But just because I dig the harmonica part. And plus we decided on it when I was working with a drummer who was a real amateur and Love Me Do was one we found that she could play. However, now I think the drummer's lost interest, so I'll me...
I just programmed the drums for a song I'm recording in my MIDI sequencer. I have a book that shows the drums for that song in it, and I copied it from there to the note. I'm certain I got the timing right. However...
I opened the original song in the sequencer to compare and make sure it was...
I liked that funky sound on the guitar, and your vocal was pure Dylan. I gotta say, the lyrics seems a bit rough, but when you hear it actually played, it's nice.