
Ricklh
New member
This is something I tried over the weekend and was very pleased with the results so thought I'd share the idea...who knows, it may help someone else.
The centerpiece of my little set-up is my Behringer Xenyx 802 mixer, which I plug into it the following:
1. Squier Tele into Digitech effects box - (stereo TRS cable out) to stereo track on the Behringer)
2. Two mics into Behringer (panned fully left & right for full stereo)
3. Zoom drum machine into mono Behringer channel.
4. Run cable out of Behringer into either an MP3 player with "line-in", or your PC. (I used an iRiver MP3 player and the sound quality on playback was surprisingly good - now I can listen back at any time without booting up my PC.)
5. Get a nice mix of the guitar/drums & mics then begin recording while experimenting with the various drum patterns and try to come up with guitar riffs and/or chord progressions that work well with the patterns. If you come up with a drum & guitar "demo composition" you like, make up lyrics on the fly and sing a scratch vocal along with the drums & guitar. It may/probably will sound like total crap at this point but the idea is to brainstorm for song ideas, & melody. Continue recording as long as you want moving through diffferent drum beats, guitar riffs After recording anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour, stop recording and play it all back. You might be surprised to find you've come up with 2 or 3 very workable song ideas.
6. You can also take the 2-track recording you've just made and add some bass on your multi-tracker of choice to flesh out the potential of the song ideas you've come up with.
The centerpiece of my little set-up is my Behringer Xenyx 802 mixer, which I plug into it the following:
1. Squier Tele into Digitech effects box - (stereo TRS cable out) to stereo track on the Behringer)
2. Two mics into Behringer (panned fully left & right for full stereo)
3. Zoom drum machine into mono Behringer channel.
4. Run cable out of Behringer into either an MP3 player with "line-in", or your PC. (I used an iRiver MP3 player and the sound quality on playback was surprisingly good - now I can listen back at any time without booting up my PC.)
5. Get a nice mix of the guitar/drums & mics then begin recording while experimenting with the various drum patterns and try to come up with guitar riffs and/or chord progressions that work well with the patterns. If you come up with a drum & guitar "demo composition" you like, make up lyrics on the fly and sing a scratch vocal along with the drums & guitar. It may/probably will sound like total crap at this point but the idea is to brainstorm for song ideas, & melody. Continue recording as long as you want moving through diffferent drum beats, guitar riffs After recording anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour, stop recording and play it all back. You might be surprised to find you've come up with 2 or 3 very workable song ideas.
6. You can also take the 2-track recording you've just made and add some bass on your multi-tracker of choice to flesh out the potential of the song ideas you've come up with.