FattMusiek said:
I like the sound of the guitar in the intro. The vocals are pretty good as well. I don't know if it was intentional or not, but the hard right panned snare is buggin' me.
It was intentional, but maybe too much of it. I was told about panning the pieces of the set from left to right to coincide with where the physically are.
Hmm.. I actually didn't think the sax was off. I mean... the fills do a lot with syncopation... that could throw you off some I guess. Not sure. I'll listen again tomorrow with fresh ears.
I noticed the lead vocals has some strong 'P's that pop some. And I think some F's. We do eventually need a better vocal recording mic... but I think maybe we need a screen for his mic in the meantime. Yes, no? Its a shure sm58.
I guess i never said what the mics were. The drums are mic'd with 5 sm57's and unforunately 2 vocal mics that aren't so hot. I put them on the snare and the bass drum. Someone recommended putting one of the vocals on the snare since that is what we have to work with for now... but I put the other vocal on the bass drum under my own opinion that the other stuff would sound a lot worse than this.
We mic'd the acoustic guitar and fed in the line, so we have both on the recording. I really do like how they mesh together better than how they sound separate. We redid the rhthym guitar today for this song because one of the problems I was hearing is that he was a little out of tune. We'll see how that sounds in the next couple days. Didn't feel like lugging all the equipment back to my house from where we practice since we'll be recording again tomorrow and the next day.
We mic'd the bass guitar amp from about 6 " away and fed the line from that.
The sax I mic'd with my clip on mic (made by K&K sound, its pretty nice,) and
the shure sm58. I ended up only using the clip on tracking because the sm58 track didn't seem to add much of anything.
We don't have compressors to run the drum mics through, so I'm working with my drummer to get him to play in a more limited range for now... because before I was setting the levels so his louds wouldn't clip... but then the rest of the song that wasn't so loud was too soft on the recording. I mean, I ran compressors on them in the software (waves L1) but the sound is lacking.
As for panning the rest of the instruments what do you recommend?
I have heard to put the bass and lead vocal dead center. I put the sax off to the left. I put the guitar off to the left but not as far.
Today we recorded the drums for the next song, but we did so with a click. It seemed to go a LOT better and I think this song will have far less rhthym problems. (I always forget how you spell rhthym... but never care to run a spell checker because I'll just forget again.)
Do you guys recommend at all getting a headphone amp and then micing a couple instruments individually, but play together? This seems to partially lose the benefit of multitracking to me, but I see uses for having the headphone amp/splitter anyway.
Well the mix may not be fully up to speed... but I garauntee its better than most all the cd's from the press kits the local bars get. And this is the idea for now. To get an 'ok' cd made by ourselves, as long as I can do it, so we can save money from the gigs we play and then in awhile do an actual studio thing.
Anyway... thanks for all the help. Seriously has helped tremendously.
(Minus super_C, who's last post made me think he's either dramatically lower in age than I thought, or just a very very unhappy man who really hates life. Maybe try and figure out why you aren't happy instead of spending your time bashing me. Honestly... do you really understand that this is HOME-recording.com and that there are a bunch of people like me who want to get better? Why bother telling them they aren't a pro and should quit? What does it accomplish? Doesn't that defeat the purpose of this forum? I don't get it... I just honestly don't comprehend your motives or what you think you are accomplishing. Why not help people instead if you know so much?)
Thanks a ton,
Robert