J
Jason M Hancock
New member
Here's the deal: I (guitarist) am in Russia. Wayne (bassist) is in Texas. NONETHELESS, we're starting a studio band and I'll most likely drive the recording side of things. But the big question is, how do we pull it off? My own first stab in the dark at this is below. Anyone who sees any pitfalls or better ways of doing this, please let me know. We're both eager to start working on material.
1. I would lay down a click track and/or drum track (from a machine) and the guitar track. I'd use a good quality digital multitracker for this (thinking of the Korg D1600 right now).
2. The hard part: how do I get the tracks to Wayne so he can develop a bass line, rehearse it, record it, and then send everything back to me? The idea is that I would then add vocals, other instruments as needed, mix everything with whatever compression and effects would be needed and then master everything.
Is this possible or have we gone nuts? Digital seems best for this because it seems like it would be universal and wouldn't matter which unit either one of used to record our respective tracks. In contrast, if we used tape, I've read that the tape heads we'd each be using might not match up.
It seems like it should be possible to develop and record new material this way. Kind of like play-by-mail chess. It seems akin to taking an unfinished project recorded in New York to a mastering facility in LA. It's just gotta be possible! Please tell me how...I'll certainly appreciate any tips and guidance!
Jason
1. I would lay down a click track and/or drum track (from a machine) and the guitar track. I'd use a good quality digital multitracker for this (thinking of the Korg D1600 right now).
2. The hard part: how do I get the tracks to Wayne so he can develop a bass line, rehearse it, record it, and then send everything back to me? The idea is that I would then add vocals, other instruments as needed, mix everything with whatever compression and effects would be needed and then master everything.
Is this possible or have we gone nuts? Digital seems best for this because it seems like it would be universal and wouldn't matter which unit either one of used to record our respective tracks. In contrast, if we used tape, I've read that the tape heads we'd each be using might not match up.
It seems like it should be possible to develop and record new material this way. Kind of like play-by-mail chess. It seems akin to taking an unfinished project recorded in New York to a mastering facility in LA. It's just gotta be possible! Please tell me how...I'll certainly appreciate any tips and guidance!
Jason