Any advices for a newbie?

  • Thread starter Thread starter wallystripes
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Try micing the guitar cab with both mics at the same time with the C4000 set to omni, if the sound is thin one of the mics is out of phase. Place the 2 mics at about the same distance about 2" from the cab. To adjust the tone move the mics towards the centre of the speaker to increase top end and towards the edge to add more bass. The 2 mics do not have to be the same position. Unless the room sounds good forget the room mic idea.

Alan.

Yeah, the c4000 is a great mic, what I've been able to record sounds really beautiful through that. The sm57 is harsh for mee, but everyone has one and I guess with attention to position it will do a fine job.

I dont really know if my room sounds good :confused:. It's just the room where I keep all of my gear. What should I look for to determine that?
 
Ok so now i've come to the part of the learning curve when after the inicial romance with this new thing you get really frustrated because things are not working out. Kinda like when you have your first fight with your girlfriend.

As I said earlier y first try was inpiring. I've been experimenting more and today I tried my mos complex recording so far. First of all I had issues with my guitar amp so there was an awful hiss on the recording. My sm57 had problems with the xlr connection (so soon?!!) and although I got a pretty decent bass tone for my first try, the bass player wasnt able to perform the track on time!

I was really irritated and decided to quit. I will rest from recording for a day and then try again. Im sure I will have a better experience next time
 
Yes. Don't bet on the ponies.
Funny, I'd say the opposite. Put your money on a pony !

As I said earlier y first try was inpiring. I've been experimenting more and today I tried my mos complex recording so far. First of all I had issues with my guitar amp so there was an awful hiss on the recording. My sm57 had problems with the xlr connection (so soon?!!) and although I got a pretty decent bass tone for my first try, the bass player wasnt able to perform the track on time!

I was really irritated and decided to quit. I will rest from recording for a day and then try again. Im sure I will have a better experience next time
That's the way to approach it. Many times, a session has been really frustrating and I've gone to bed that night seething with rage and howling at the moon with frustration. But I know that with determined perseverance, it will come good. It might take years ! I had this piece {"The Logacta question"} that I'd been writing in my head for a couple of years. It was wild, it had 4 different time signatures and to further complicate matters, the piece kept going from one to the another, hardly settling, before changing. My drumming friend and I tried recording it over a few weeks and I knew the bit so I didn't have much problem with it. I'd even done a 4 track demo with me knocking out the drum pattern ~ish but this just eluded us. Then one day I said right, we're going to nail this ! And we did 30 takes, probably the most I've ever done. And it just didn't sound right ! We had headaches at the end. But in the end with the help of a secondary drum track, me playing conductor and some tablas, we got there. It's rough and raw but I love it. It was a labour of love, I think.
Ok so now i've come to the part of the learning curve when after the inicial romance with this new thing you get really frustrated because things are not working out. Kinda like when you have your first fight with your girlfriend.
Well, that depends on who delivers the knockout blow !
 
I guess thats what ill do. Also I currently have a writer's block so I dont really have any serious thing to record. For thats reason ive been experimenting with mic positions instead of trying to record a full track
 
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