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dave321321
New member
hi everybody,
i'm new to recording but want to make some decent basement recordings of some stuff i'm working on.
i currently own a computer with cooledit on it, a shure sm57 and a shure pg48, a really really cheap 'mixer' which is kind of radioshack quality and really doesn't do much more than boost the mic signal, and some gear.
right now i'm only using one mic at a time because i need to get another xlr-1/4" cord because the super awesome cheap mixer only has 1/4" inputs
this morning i tried to record some drums, guitar, and bass and put it together.
here is a link to my 'test':
if anyone feels like downloading that and listening to it and just offering some general suggestions (bearing in mind what i have to use), that would be really awesome. i'd rather people who know what they're doing listen to this and if you can think of anything really obvious that might help out my little recording endeavours, that would be sweet.
right off the bat, i don't like how muddy everything is. the cymbals cover up a lot of low-end on the guitars, and the guitars are kind of muddy by themselves, and the bass peaks really quickly.
i've been reading homerecording.com for the last 2 hours and already have a few ideas of how to make everything better, but like i said, if anyone wants to give me some advice that would rock.
i'm new to recording but want to make some decent basement recordings of some stuff i'm working on.
i currently own a computer with cooledit on it, a shure sm57 and a shure pg48, a really really cheap 'mixer' which is kind of radioshack quality and really doesn't do much more than boost the mic signal, and some gear.
right now i'm only using one mic at a time because i need to get another xlr-1/4" cord because the super awesome cheap mixer only has 1/4" inputs
this morning i tried to record some drums, guitar, and bass and put it together.
here is a link to my 'test':
if anyone feels like downloading that and listening to it and just offering some general suggestions (bearing in mind what i have to use), that would be really awesome. i'd rather people who know what they're doing listen to this and if you can think of anything really obvious that might help out my little recording endeavours, that would be sweet.
right off the bat, i don't like how muddy everything is. the cymbals cover up a lot of low-end on the guitars, and the guitars are kind of muddy by themselves, and the bass peaks really quickly.
i've been reading homerecording.com for the last 2 hours and already have a few ideas of how to make everything better, but like i said, if anyone wants to give me some advice that would rock.