
WhinyLittleRunt
Member
I know this question has been asked in the past, but I wanted to get a bit of clarification based on my setup and what I'm trying to do...
I specifically bought an 8-track reel-to-reel (Tascam 38) for the occasion that I would need to record my drumset, as I have in the past using my Firepod interface righ into Cubase or whatever DAW I was in at the time. I'd love to keep it easy and only record 8 tracks analog and keep it there, but I know I'll want more since I can use up to 6 or 7 mics recording my kit. My typical procedure for recording a song (since I do it all myself) is to record the entire thing in layers and then do drums last. so my obvious approach was to record everything but the drums onto the reel-to-reel, then mix it in analog and bounce it to DAW. Then record from a bounced stereo track from the DAW back to the tape and be left with 6 tracks for drums, then record all of that back to the DAW for final drum mixing against my already mixed stereo track. This theoretically works, although I do usually need a click track as well, so I have to find a way to incorporate that. I've heard about SMPTE time code and read a little about it, but it sounds like more hassle than it's worth. My only concern is getting things to line up in the DAW if I start messing around with any timecode syncing, which is why I felt that my makeshift procedure would technically work...
I specifically bought an 8-track reel-to-reel (Tascam 38) for the occasion that I would need to record my drumset, as I have in the past using my Firepod interface righ into Cubase or whatever DAW I was in at the time. I'd love to keep it easy and only record 8 tracks analog and keep it there, but I know I'll want more since I can use up to 6 or 7 mics recording my kit. My typical procedure for recording a song (since I do it all myself) is to record the entire thing in layers and then do drums last. so my obvious approach was to record everything but the drums onto the reel-to-reel, then mix it in analog and bounce it to DAW. Then record from a bounced stereo track from the DAW back to the tape and be left with 6 tracks for drums, then record all of that back to the DAW for final drum mixing against my already mixed stereo track. This theoretically works, although I do usually need a click track as well, so I have to find a way to incorporate that. I've heard about SMPTE time code and read a little about it, but it sounds like more hassle than it's worth. My only concern is getting things to line up in the DAW if I start messing around with any timecode syncing, which is why I felt that my makeshift procedure would technically work...