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Dad_of_four
New member
Question from a newbie. I have a tascam DP-01 and I've laid down 4 tracks (drums, bass, guitar, vox).
My master track is saved as a .wav file (still in the tascam) which I usb to my laptop to burn on a CD (16 bit 44.1mHz?). I've listened on three types of players, car, stereo in house and another cd player on my computer... the song sounds worse than before I mastered it. My bass guitar is "muddy?" is this the right term. Volume wise, its about 3/4's to 1/2 my original track levels.
The tech sheet with the tascam says my input levels (analog equivalent is
-10dBV to +6dBV).
Did I record the bass too hot causing distortion (the drums, guitar and voice sound "ok, not great, but ok" just overall softer than on the tascam.
I did check the "light" to watch for clipping, and backed off a bit during my rehearsals to ensure I didn't clip during the actual recording. Is there a prefered level to record guitars (electric and acoustic, as well as bass)?
Thanks for helping a newbie!
My master track is saved as a .wav file (still in the tascam) which I usb to my laptop to burn on a CD (16 bit 44.1mHz?). I've listened on three types of players, car, stereo in house and another cd player on my computer... the song sounds worse than before I mastered it. My bass guitar is "muddy?" is this the right term. Volume wise, its about 3/4's to 1/2 my original track levels.
The tech sheet with the tascam says my input levels (analog equivalent is
-10dBV to +6dBV).
Did I record the bass too hot causing distortion (the drums, guitar and voice sound "ok, not great, but ok" just overall softer than on the tascam.
I did check the "light" to watch for clipping, and backed off a bit during my rehearsals to ensure I didn't clip during the actual recording. Is there a prefered level to record guitars (electric and acoustic, as well as bass)?
Thanks for helping a newbie!