
witzendoz
Senior Member
We recently did a live demo video (it's not finished yet) and how I did it was like this.
1 Fixed camera (pro TV station type) approx. 60 feet from stage off to the left due to getting it out the way of the crowd. Framed to capture whole stage.
1 mobile camera, handheld (home digital tape type) for close up shots, solos, my face (haha
) etc etc.
Laptop with Presonus fire pod, stereo pair of mics above mixing position 60 feet from stage into firepod mic inputs. Stereo line from front of house mixer into line 3 & 4 inputs of Firepod.
Recorded the audio as 2 stereo wave files, 1 from the mics 1 from the lines.
Mixed the audio by time aligning the 2 wave files, and treating them with a different eq (not much needed) and different compression. I also added a little reverb to the FOH desk mix as it was a little dry.
The desk mix had a lot of vocal and kick drum and the mics had a great balance of everything, so mixing them together improved the clarity of the vocal and the kick. Not quite a studio recording but a great live recording, we may put a track or 2 on the next CD as bonus tracks.
The film guys have the final audio files from me and are editing 3 songs as a final clip which hopefully won't be long. I may do some amateur extras myself later. They are using the 2 cameras audio to align the vision to sound, and if there is a drift they will just cut to another shot and back, however in the digital world there is not much drift even if the cameras and the recorder was not time locked, and you don't stay on 1 shot long enough to be a problem. Another trick I have found in the past is if there is a missing bit of vision (no usable shot) cut to a long shot of another song of similar tempo for a few seconds, no one will notice.
Cheers
Alan.
1 Fixed camera (pro TV station type) approx. 60 feet from stage off to the left due to getting it out the way of the crowd. Framed to capture whole stage.
1 mobile camera, handheld (home digital tape type) for close up shots, solos, my face (haha

Laptop with Presonus fire pod, stereo pair of mics above mixing position 60 feet from stage into firepod mic inputs. Stereo line from front of house mixer into line 3 & 4 inputs of Firepod.
Recorded the audio as 2 stereo wave files, 1 from the mics 1 from the lines.
Mixed the audio by time aligning the 2 wave files, and treating them with a different eq (not much needed) and different compression. I also added a little reverb to the FOH desk mix as it was a little dry.
The desk mix had a lot of vocal and kick drum and the mics had a great balance of everything, so mixing them together improved the clarity of the vocal and the kick. Not quite a studio recording but a great live recording, we may put a track or 2 on the next CD as bonus tracks.
The film guys have the final audio files from me and are editing 3 songs as a final clip which hopefully won't be long. I may do some amateur extras myself later. They are using the 2 cameras audio to align the vision to sound, and if there is a drift they will just cut to another shot and back, however in the digital world there is not much drift even if the cameras and the recorder was not time locked, and you don't stay on 1 shot long enough to be a problem. Another trick I have found in the past is if there is a missing bit of vision (no usable shot) cut to a long shot of another song of similar tempo for a few seconds, no one will notice.
Cheers
Alan.