T
teecam
New member
Hey everyone. Well, after some awesome advice from a few of the other guys on the forum, I decided to take what I have and work within those limitations; namely, a TEAC A-3340S at the heart of it all, a 6 Channel M2A Mixer, a Shure M67 mic mixer/preamp, a bunch of SM 57's, a Rode NTK, and a really awesome sounding room.
I'm recording my band (Americana/Folk Rock) Drums, Bass, two guitars, and keys. We'd love to play live in the room together and then have friends who play strings, and others who do backing vocals overdub later (because we all won't fit in the room, we certainly don't have enough mics to accommodate all that, and schedules are not lining up.
Here's what I'd love to get your input on:
With a four track and six channels, would it be best to record the core of the band live--Say drums on one track, bass on another, guitars on the thirds and keys on the fourth, mix them, bounce them to one track to open up room on the other three tracks for overdubs
OR
Make sure our mix is awesome (not that I wouldn't do that for the above scenario...it just seems more pressing here) and record the full band on one track, leaving the other two open for the overdubs.
OR something else I'm not thinking of, cause right now that's all I got!
I'm a newb to recording in general, particularly analog, and I have zero experience in engineering and mixing.
I have no idea how a final mix would happen with option two...I guess I'd be stuck with what I've got which may not be a bad thing gear-wise, but I'm not so sure about with a recording.
As always, thanks!
P.S. - A friend just handed me a Peavy 801 Mixer. Garbage? Seems like it, but I haven't found much on it and won't be able to mess with it until the weekend.
I'm recording my band (Americana/Folk Rock) Drums, Bass, two guitars, and keys. We'd love to play live in the room together and then have friends who play strings, and others who do backing vocals overdub later (because we all won't fit in the room, we certainly don't have enough mics to accommodate all that, and schedules are not lining up.
Here's what I'd love to get your input on:
With a four track and six channels, would it be best to record the core of the band live--Say drums on one track, bass on another, guitars on the thirds and keys on the fourth, mix them, bounce them to one track to open up room on the other three tracks for overdubs
OR
Make sure our mix is awesome (not that I wouldn't do that for the above scenario...it just seems more pressing here) and record the full band on one track, leaving the other two open for the overdubs.
OR something else I'm not thinking of, cause right now that's all I got!
I'm a newb to recording in general, particularly analog, and I have zero experience in engineering and mixing.
I have no idea how a final mix would happen with option two...I guess I'd be stuck with what I've got which may not be a bad thing gear-wise, but I'm not so sure about with a recording.
As always, thanks!
P.S. - A friend just handed me a Peavy 801 Mixer. Garbage? Seems like it, but I haven't found much on it and won't be able to mess with it until the weekend.