constantchaos
New member
Hello everybody,
I'm a newb to this website, but not necessarily a newb to recording. Here's my problem...
I recorded a 3 piece band yesterday (drums, guitar, vox). After recording the songs I noticed that when I single out the guitar track alone (which was direct out from the guitar head) was picking up the kick drum. We recorded drums and guitar simultaneously. I'm not sure if this is because the low frequency of the kick was somehow going through the guitar cabinet into the head? I'll put down the gear I use and maybe someone can come up with some kind of explaination. Maybe it's the guitarist amp rig?
Here's what I use..
Behringer MX2642A 20-Channel Mixer
2 Behringer Feedback Destroyers (for practice use)
A 6 Channel Headphone Amp
2 Delta 1010L Soundcards
2 1/4" to RCA 8-channel snakes (used for Insert on the mixing board to Delta1010L)
A set of 5 Peavey drum mics (each rating at the freq level for each drum)
Shure SM58 for vocals (untill we can afford a nice condenser mic)
And the program Reaper to record with.
I'm a newb to this website, but not necessarily a newb to recording. Here's my problem...
I recorded a 3 piece band yesterday (drums, guitar, vox). After recording the songs I noticed that when I single out the guitar track alone (which was direct out from the guitar head) was picking up the kick drum. We recorded drums and guitar simultaneously. I'm not sure if this is because the low frequency of the kick was somehow going through the guitar cabinet into the head? I'll put down the gear I use and maybe someone can come up with some kind of explaination. Maybe it's the guitarist amp rig?
Here's what I use..
Behringer MX2642A 20-Channel Mixer
2 Behringer Feedback Destroyers (for practice use)
A 6 Channel Headphone Amp
2 Delta 1010L Soundcards
2 1/4" to RCA 8-channel snakes (used for Insert on the mixing board to Delta1010L)
A set of 5 Peavey drum mics (each rating at the freq level for each drum)
Shure SM58 for vocals (untill we can afford a nice condenser mic)
And the program Reaper to record with.