T
turntablist
New member
Recently, I attended a show of my friend's band with my MR-8. The sound for the show was already being handled by a sound company so I was planning on just plugging in to one of the sound guy's MASTER OUTS from his big board and on in to my MR-8. Theoretically this would work great, but the finished product was way under my expectations. I understand that the sound guy was mixing for the theatre (not for my recording) but it seems like on the recording, when just the vocalist is making small talk between songs, the recording sounds damn nice! But then when all the instruments rock out at once, like when transitioning from a soft part to a loud part of a song, there is loss of some instruments. For instance, if the vocalist is belting a note out, and the guitar and bass are rockin, the drums will get lost. Or sometimes the guitar or backing vocals will get lost. The signal never once went over zero decibels so it's not distortion. It just seems like the cable had too much running through it (if that is possible).
The sound guy gave me two XLRs (right and left) but since he wasn't doing any crazy panning, I just plugged in the left one in to Input A and recorded in mono to save space. Could that have made this recording sound so bad? I am prety sure i had my input switch switched to line level too.
Is my MR8 at fault for this crappy recording? If any of you have any idas on how i could avoid in this in the future, i'd like to hear them.
The sound guy gave me two XLRs (right and left) but since he wasn't doing any crazy panning, I just plugged in the left one in to Input A and recorded in mono to save space. Could that have made this recording sound so bad? I am prety sure i had my input switch switched to line level too.
Is my MR8 at fault for this crappy recording? If any of you have any idas on how i could avoid in this in the future, i'd like to hear them.