T
tbonejc1
New member
I wouldn't exactly say I'm a newbie, but here's a newbie-ish question.(actually 2)
I recently bought an mbox(1) with pro tools.
I'm working on some songs for demo recording. Me and my partner are handling everything but drums, so we're recording to a click.
first question:
I have a 4 track tascam tape deck, and a 4 channel pa available as mixing boards.
I'm wondering the best way to record drums.
my first thought is to mic the snare, kick, and hi-hat as 3 of the channels on the 4 track, and using 4 mics on my pa for overheads, etc...getting a good mix on there and using the line out to the 4th track on the tape machine.(playing the tune to the click and recorded music already recorded.)then(hopefully), dumping the drum tracks into protools seperately..so I at least have 4 seperate drum tracks to mess with. any thoughts on that procedure, or another way that might be better given my equipment?.
second question:
when recording to a click, what's the best way you've found to recording a gradual tempo change...
for instance, half the song recorded at 90bpm, then a acceleration over say 2 bars, ending at 120bpm for the rest of the song? is there a way to get the click to simulate this?
at a loss,
JC
I recently bought an mbox(1) with pro tools.
I'm working on some songs for demo recording. Me and my partner are handling everything but drums, so we're recording to a click.
first question:
I have a 4 track tascam tape deck, and a 4 channel pa available as mixing boards.
I'm wondering the best way to record drums.
my first thought is to mic the snare, kick, and hi-hat as 3 of the channels on the 4 track, and using 4 mics on my pa for overheads, etc...getting a good mix on there and using the line out to the 4th track on the tape machine.(playing the tune to the click and recorded music already recorded.)then(hopefully), dumping the drum tracks into protools seperately..so I at least have 4 seperate drum tracks to mess with. any thoughts on that procedure, or another way that might be better given my equipment?.
second question:
when recording to a click, what's the best way you've found to recording a gradual tempo change...
for instance, half the song recorded at 90bpm, then a acceleration over say 2 bars, ending at 120bpm for the rest of the song? is there a way to get the click to simulate this?
at a loss,
JC

The click issue sounds like a purely artistic decision to me - something you'd have to try both ways and see how you like it. As to HOW to do it, I could tell a Sonar user, but I don't know Pro Tools.
