Collaborating in Different Places on Different Recorders?

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Robertt8

Robertt8

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Is there any easy way to collaborate with another musician who's, (A) On the other side of the world, and (B) on a different recorder? I know you'll somehow need to take that file and turn send it out (mail or internet), but how do I take that file and load it back onto each recorder and ad stuff? Or is this kind of a pain in the ass if say I'm on a Digital 8 track (Rolland VS880-EX) and he's on a Tape 8 track (I'm using this as an example...I'm not sure what he has).

How should this be done?
 
There are really only two ways to do it. Send tracks via the internet or mail and what works best depends exactly on what the recorders are. If he was using an analog tape deck it would make things considerably more difficult.
 
Obviously, depending on the scenario, there are 2 stand-out approaches:

If you can send the files via internet, I would think that your best approach would be to use some sort of mixing software (ProTools, etc.). If you have wav files, you can edit/mix/etc. all on your software, and just add tracks as necessary. Obviously, this won't work if you're sending tapes via mail.

So if you are sending tapes via mail, I would say just record the tape (if this is the case) into your digital 8 track. It's not perfect, but it will still get the track onto your 8 track.

My old band's bassist recorded our demo. (It was a pretty horrible demo-recording-wise, not music-wise). I wanted to play around with the tracks when I first got my digital recorder, just to see what I could do with it, and improve my vocals. I wanted him to send me the wav files, but instead, he burned the individual tracks (except his shitty, lame-ass bass lines---as if I actually wanted them...he was a real dick) onto CD-R as audio tracks. I had to record them from the CD's into my recorder. Then I recorded new vocals and had a friend record new bass lines to the songs. He wanted to make it difficult for me, but I still came up with something that made it sound 10x better. After I got the tracks, I never talked to him again...he was such a dick....and not even a good bassist. Let alone a horrible producer.

The moral of the story: I have no fucking clue, but I'm glad I came up with something better than what that asshole did. LOL. Thanks, you've been a great audience.
 
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