J
Jhund
New member
I've been screwing around with recording stuff off and on for about five years. I've been playing guitar for 12 yrs, drums for 3 yrs, bass for a few months, and been amateurish at singing for as long as I can remember. I like a very large variety of music, from classic rock to progressive metal to punk to pop and back.
I've always had lots of cool ideas for riffs or songs, and I'll record bits and pieces of what I like, but I've never composed an entire song start to finish. My goal is to be able to get my ideas from my head to a recording without sounding like a train wreck. Rather than tackling two beasts at once (writing and recording), I want to record a cover first. I think once I manage the first one, I'll have beaten the block and things will roll down the hill from there.
In any case, here's a basic rundown for the gear I have:
Recording Equipment: MXL 990 & MXL 991 mics, Pod Studio UX2, 2x KRK Rokit 6 monitors, my computer (gaming comp, so has plenty of processing power/ram), I use audacity to record (though I'm open to other programs, i just dont know much about them).
Instruments: I have an Ibanez RG770DX (2x humbuckers & a single coil), an epiphone SG, and a yamaha acoustic (fairly cheap, but sounds decent). I also own a fender american standard p-bass, and an Alesis DM-10 electric drumkit.
Over the next 2 weeks or so I plan on forcing myself to record a cover of the song Tyler by the Toadies. I want to see how every instrument plays into the next, how the effects should work, etc.
To get to the point: I'm forcing myself into an uncomfortable learning experience and you get to watch (or listen)!
Where should I start? Do I record a drum track to a metronome? Do I make a "rough draft" sort of track, then later re-record and "pretty" it up? How do I pick amp settings (or drum kits) that don't have crazy EQ settings that interfere with other instruments (bass and drums, guitar and voice, etc.). Where do I even start?
Any and all advice is appreciated. I really am unsure of where to begin, and even links to relevant recording tips would be great. Anyone familiar with the UX2 or other line6 sound interfaces? Any cool tricks?
Thanks in advance.
I've always had lots of cool ideas for riffs or songs, and I'll record bits and pieces of what I like, but I've never composed an entire song start to finish. My goal is to be able to get my ideas from my head to a recording without sounding like a train wreck. Rather than tackling two beasts at once (writing and recording), I want to record a cover first. I think once I manage the first one, I'll have beaten the block and things will roll down the hill from there.
In any case, here's a basic rundown for the gear I have:
Recording Equipment: MXL 990 & MXL 991 mics, Pod Studio UX2, 2x KRK Rokit 6 monitors, my computer (gaming comp, so has plenty of processing power/ram), I use audacity to record (though I'm open to other programs, i just dont know much about them).
Instruments: I have an Ibanez RG770DX (2x humbuckers & a single coil), an epiphone SG, and a yamaha acoustic (fairly cheap, but sounds decent). I also own a fender american standard p-bass, and an Alesis DM-10 electric drumkit.
Over the next 2 weeks or so I plan on forcing myself to record a cover of the song Tyler by the Toadies. I want to see how every instrument plays into the next, how the effects should work, etc.
To get to the point: I'm forcing myself into an uncomfortable learning experience and you get to watch (or listen)!
Where should I start? Do I record a drum track to a metronome? Do I make a "rough draft" sort of track, then later re-record and "pretty" it up? How do I pick amp settings (or drum kits) that don't have crazy EQ settings that interfere with other instruments (bass and drums, guitar and voice, etc.). Where do I even start?
Any and all advice is appreciated. I really am unsure of where to begin, and even links to relevant recording tips would be great. Anyone familiar with the UX2 or other line6 sound interfaces? Any cool tricks?
Thanks in advance.