K
koalabearsoup
New member
working like a charm. I have a series of questions.
I'm new to analog but not new to recording, been doing it for about 3 years every day. Many swear by the 244 and now that I've got one I can really see why.
Now I'd really like to get as much out of it as I possibly can. I really appreciate how helpful you all are and have been and continue to be on this website, no personal gain to you and you still offer your time and energy? Almost unheard of these days. Keep it up guys.
Most of all, right now I'm wondering, what's your tape of preference for the 244?
Any sort of mic preferences? My dad taught me to fear the new and trust the old, and I've enjoyed using a sm-57 which I heard was supposed to be some sort of industry standard or some crap, and I liked it, but I was using new digital stuff. Is there any difference as far as the age of the mic? I want to be recording vocals and an amp as well. I know different types of mics are supposed to get different sort of vocal sounds right?
Is it generally preferred to mic an amp instead of just directly inputting the guitar from a pedal of some sort? I'm going to guess that's a yes, but could you explain this to me a little?
Is there a marked difference between "digital" effects pedals, or "analog" effects pedals as far as quality goes, do you think it would make a difference when recording analog?
Also I have a mackie mixer... don't remember the model at the moment... but are there mixers that are used specifically for recording, and mixers specifically used for live stuff, and they don't overlap? Is there a difference in the integrity of the sound between older mixers and newer mixers?
For vocals, do most use a tube pre-amp as the only thing between the mic and the recorder? Are there any particular advantages or disadvantages to any or all of these configurations or their opposites? I've been recording a while and have recorded a literal shit ton, but I have not had any formal learning about any of this stuff, most of the stuff I know was just from tinkering around, lots of trial and error. Your wisdom may perhaps prevent further errors on my part!
On the 244, any tips as for multi-tracking the vocals and stuff? I haven't learned how to "bounce" yet on the 244 but I'm sure I could learn myself, but is there any particular recommended method for multitracking this alongside other freshly laid music, drums, bass, guitars also possibly needing to be multitracked?
Ive screwed around with mixing a little bit too, and I vaguely remember some sort of thing about the layer of the track making a difference in the sound? Is this also how a 4 track works? Are there particular orders that are used to record vocals, drums, bass, guitar and all that, just it just depend on the sort of sound you want?
Thanks a lot you guys, I can't thank you enough for the good advice I've gotten on this website. Any pointers, advice, words of wisdom, recommendations for literature, tutorials, anything at all would help me out a lot.
I'm new to analog but not new to recording, been doing it for about 3 years every day. Many swear by the 244 and now that I've got one I can really see why.
Now I'd really like to get as much out of it as I possibly can. I really appreciate how helpful you all are and have been and continue to be on this website, no personal gain to you and you still offer your time and energy? Almost unheard of these days. Keep it up guys.
Most of all, right now I'm wondering, what's your tape of preference for the 244?
Any sort of mic preferences? My dad taught me to fear the new and trust the old, and I've enjoyed using a sm-57 which I heard was supposed to be some sort of industry standard or some crap, and I liked it, but I was using new digital stuff. Is there any difference as far as the age of the mic? I want to be recording vocals and an amp as well. I know different types of mics are supposed to get different sort of vocal sounds right?
Is it generally preferred to mic an amp instead of just directly inputting the guitar from a pedal of some sort? I'm going to guess that's a yes, but could you explain this to me a little?
Is there a marked difference between "digital" effects pedals, or "analog" effects pedals as far as quality goes, do you think it would make a difference when recording analog?
Also I have a mackie mixer... don't remember the model at the moment... but are there mixers that are used specifically for recording, and mixers specifically used for live stuff, and they don't overlap? Is there a difference in the integrity of the sound between older mixers and newer mixers?
For vocals, do most use a tube pre-amp as the only thing between the mic and the recorder? Are there any particular advantages or disadvantages to any or all of these configurations or their opposites? I've been recording a while and have recorded a literal shit ton, but I have not had any formal learning about any of this stuff, most of the stuff I know was just from tinkering around, lots of trial and error. Your wisdom may perhaps prevent further errors on my part!
On the 244, any tips as for multi-tracking the vocals and stuff? I haven't learned how to "bounce" yet on the 244 but I'm sure I could learn myself, but is there any particular recommended method for multitracking this alongside other freshly laid music, drums, bass, guitars also possibly needing to be multitracked?
Ive screwed around with mixing a little bit too, and I vaguely remember some sort of thing about the layer of the track making a difference in the sound? Is this also how a 4 track works? Are there particular orders that are used to record vocals, drums, bass, guitar and all that, just it just depend on the sort of sound you want?
Thanks a lot you guys, I can't thank you enough for the good advice I've gotten on this website. Any pointers, advice, words of wisdom, recommendations for literature, tutorials, anything at all would help me out a lot.