
Chris F
New member
I hope I can explain this withou recreating "War and Peace"...
(sorry if I'm in the wrong forum!)
Basically, I've got a couple of things I do in my studio/music room:
1) Make good demo and up quality recordings of acoustic instrument groups in Digital Performer through a MOTU 1224 into a G4 Quicksilver. I've figured out how to rout everything and how to mix in the box with plugs. Sure, I could always learn more, but for now, I'm okay.
2) Make recordings of my personal practice session with one mic, one pre, and a home MD deck - also fine for now.
3) What I'd like to learn to do with the following gear is to make "Quick and Dirty" but halfway decent session recordings so that I can play (I'm a professional jazz bassist) with different folks in drummerless duo or trio settings and record in a "Punch & Play" kinda way. I know very little about the best way to do this, and would like to learn more.
THE GEAR:
Soundcraft M12
Alesis Masterlink (just bought today for this purpose)
M-Audio Tampa (for the double bass)
M-Audio DMP3 (probably for the piano)
M-Audio Solaris (for the bass)
MXL 603s (2 - for the piano or archtop)
SP B1 (for a trumpet or sax - board pres for now)
I know how to hook everything up and send the outs to the Masterlink, but I have several questions:
* Would it be better to send analog outs to the ML, or use the SPDIF option on the board? I've never used the digital out before.
* Since the only "mixing" will be our use of dynamics once we have our initial levels set, and since I like the way plugin compression sounds on the piano, I suppose I should track with compression. I don't mind using the M12 EQ, but I don't yet have a compressor and have no idea how to use one when tracking. Do I need a two channel compressor (one for each piano mic), or can I simply put a single compressor on an aux channel and send it to both piano channels? This is where I need the most help!
* What would be a good clean compressor that's easy to use that matches the price and quality range of my other gear (not the best, I know, but it's what I've got...)? I only have one or two rack spaces left, so nothing too huge.
* Last, I have 2/3 of a Presonus channel strip (Tube pre and EQ3B) that I used to use for live sound...is the compressor in that series worth a damn, or would I only be wasting my money?
Any and all help appreciated. I can't wait to get the sessions rolling!

Basically, I've got a couple of things I do in my studio/music room:
1) Make good demo and up quality recordings of acoustic instrument groups in Digital Performer through a MOTU 1224 into a G4 Quicksilver. I've figured out how to rout everything and how to mix in the box with plugs. Sure, I could always learn more, but for now, I'm okay.
2) Make recordings of my personal practice session with one mic, one pre, and a home MD deck - also fine for now.
3) What I'd like to learn to do with the following gear is to make "Quick and Dirty" but halfway decent session recordings so that I can play (I'm a professional jazz bassist) with different folks in drummerless duo or trio settings and record in a "Punch & Play" kinda way. I know very little about the best way to do this, and would like to learn more.
THE GEAR:
Soundcraft M12
Alesis Masterlink (just bought today for this purpose)
M-Audio Tampa (for the double bass)
M-Audio DMP3 (probably for the piano)
M-Audio Solaris (for the bass)
MXL 603s (2 - for the piano or archtop)
SP B1 (for a trumpet or sax - board pres for now)
I know how to hook everything up and send the outs to the Masterlink, but I have several questions:
* Would it be better to send analog outs to the ML, or use the SPDIF option on the board? I've never used the digital out before.
* Since the only "mixing" will be our use of dynamics once we have our initial levels set, and since I like the way plugin compression sounds on the piano, I suppose I should track with compression. I don't mind using the M12 EQ, but I don't yet have a compressor and have no idea how to use one when tracking. Do I need a two channel compressor (one for each piano mic), or can I simply put a single compressor on an aux channel and send it to both piano channels? This is where I need the most help!
* What would be a good clean compressor that's easy to use that matches the price and quality range of my other gear (not the best, I know, but it's what I've got...)? I only have one or two rack spaces left, so nothing too huge.
* Last, I have 2/3 of a Presonus channel strip (Tube pre and EQ3B) that I used to use for live sound...is the compressor in that series worth a damn, or would I only be wasting my money?
Any and all help appreciated. I can't wait to get the sessions rolling!