T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2215.1 | | HAMSTR::PELKEY | YOIKES and AWAY!!! | Tue May 28 1991 10:15 | 5 |
| Best luck we've had..
Ibanez (dunno the model) Bass..
Straight into a Fostex 8 track.
A little bit of compression..
|
2215.2 | A little spice... | GIAMEM::DERRICO | Stand and deliver! | Tue May 28 1991 13:03 | 17 |
| Recording bass can either be good or really bad. The problem I have
had, is that the bass gets lost in the mix. I found that if you add a
little compression to the bass, you can get an apparent loudness out
of it. I used to have to boost the bass up on the 4-track for the mix-
down at the expense of being to loud where you don't want it to be...
Just below making your speakers fart. *8^)
You should be able to record any bass on 4-track, providing that
it has enough gain. If you are boosting your 4-track gain too high,
you may need to raise your pickups - without distorting on the mix.
You don't need to have built in preamp in the bass - but it helps
sometimes when it comes to tone. It helps mostly if you don't have
enough tone control on the 4-track.
If you are a very light picker, this would attribute to low volumes
also.
/John
|
2215.3 | | IMTDEV::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Tue May 28 1991 15:20 | 7 |
| I hate to plug this here... But I have too.. :)
The last demo we did on my machine, we ran the bass thru the "Solid
State" voice of my Mp1 (direct). The thing worked GREAT ! Best bass
tone I've ever gotten on tape.
jc
|
2215.4 | A Certain Something | SCOAYR::SROBERTSON | | Tue May 28 1991 15:36 | 13 |
| I used a passive Ibanez on a Tascam with very average results but when
I switched to my active Hohner the sound was faultless.I needed very
little adjustments and the qaulity,plugging straight in,was amazing.
Our recording,done six months ago,is superior to any tapes,cd's I
have,you can hear every little detail in the sound of the bass with
an absolutle minimum of hiss ect. - I was amazed by the quality.
This was done on a 4-track with only guitar,drum machine,bass and
vocals on.
I did have a lot of bother when it came to using delay,flanging and
chorus but none with compression or gain.
stuart.
|
2215.5 | Just curious | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Certified Marshall-slut | Tue May 28 1991 16:07 | 8 |
| > The last demo we did on my machine, we ran the bass thru the "Solid
> State" voice of my Mp1 (direct). The thing worked GREAT ! Best bass
> tone I've ever gotten on tape.
Did you add compression (od2) to the SS voice on the Mp-1? I'd think
that would work great!
Greg (Mp1-less)
|
2215.6 | | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue May 28 1991 17:15 | 5 |
|
Active or passive electronics?
-T
|
2215.7 | Passive | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Certified Marshall-slut | Tue May 28 1991 17:58 | 7 |
| >Active or passive electronics?
If you're talking to Coop, I think the answer is passive. The bass in
question was a Peavey (something-or-other). I'm pretty sure it's one
of their lower priced models too.
Greg
|
2215.8 | | STRAT::JENSEN | Tone == JCM 900 | Tue May 28 1991 20:04 | 8 |
| You're going to laugh, but the absolute best rock bass sound I ever got on tape
went from an old Ibenez el cheapo bass (passive) --> Mesa Boogie MK III head
(clean channel) -> direct-out --> mixer input. And I didn't need a compressor
because I was using a boogie :)...
I've gotten good results going direct with some compression too.
steve
|
2215.9 | a cheap option | VOGON::REEVE | Underground boring specialist | Wed May 29 1991 07:59 | 34 |
| >I'd like to know what "y'all" are doing to get a
>good recorded bass sound on tape?
>
>Stuff like:
>
> - types of basses being recorded
home grown body with Gibson EB-0 and Rickenbacker pickups; they balance each
other out quite nicely.
> - Active or passive electronics
passive
> - Signal chain/FX
bass through Peavey TNT-100
> - Recorder type
Sony two track reel-to-reel
> - Etc.
Nothing on my end. The set up was three or four other people singing and
playing into two mikes. We spent some time getting things arranged so the
balance was good, then just played and recorded. For such a primitive set up,
the sound was amazingly good. It helps to remind me that the performance should
be more important than the recording!
Tim
P.S. I was going to add IMHO to that last sentence, but I don't think it is
warranted. I'm tired of hearing perfectly recorded, boring music.
|
2215.10 | Another Approach | RGB::ROST | Make my foam pre-CBS | Wed May 29 1991 10:24 | 24 |
| I've mentioned this to Tom before, but for others who are interested:
Any bass ---> *limiter* ---> bass rolloff EQ at about 60-100 Hz --->
mixer ---> tape
I've used this in both home and pro studios, using Peavey, Silvertone
(both passive), Fender and B.C. Rich (both active) instruments.
I prefer the limiter as it compresses peaks only. I've used the dbx
163 with *excellent* results, for dirt cheap $$ find an old 70s vintage
stereo cassette deck with a built-in limiter, that's what I use at
home. Experiments with the Boss CS-2 compressor stomp box were
discouraging, loss of high end, hiss build-up.
The reason for the EQ is that few systems can reproduce bass below
100-150 Hz anyway (certainly not a boom box, for example), so I trim it
out to keep the bottom end free of mud.
If finger noise becomes a problem, cut the EQ at 800-1000 Hz. If
excessive hiss is a problem, cut above 4 KHz.
Brian
|
2215.11 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Wed May 29 1991 12:02 | 6 |
| RE: Greg
Oh yeah, lots of compression. The ADA is loaded with it !!
I guess thats why it worked so well.
jc (Who bets a Rockman would work well too...)
|
2215.12 | | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Al Bundy for Gov' | Fri May 31 1991 16:59 | 15 |
|
now that i'm recording again, i'd go with what Brian says. I
use an el cheapo-cheapo nameless bass directly into the mixer on
my tascam 424, but i use the EQ to cut out the real low end so i
do not have any mud left over. What I thought i really needed was
a compressor but the limiter sounds right and i'm gonna go check
out my old rat shack cassette deck tonight.
I find I need the limiter more since i've been playing upright
bass along with electric. I tend to put too much muscle on the A and
E string when jumping from one to another.
bob
|
2215.13 | Hellllpppp!!! | SMURF::GALLO | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue Jun 04 1991 12:03 | 22 |
|
Hellllllpppppppp!!
I'm at the end of my rope with this stuff!!! :-(
Some background:
I'm using a P-bass with GHS Boomers and when play basically any note
on the E or A, it sounds muddy and it has a lot of really junky
overtones in it. No amount of EQ solves the problem.
Anybody know what this is? Anybody else ever hear this?
To isolate this I need the help of some kind bassist.. (uh oh! :-))
What I'm looking for is someone that would be willing to come up
to my place with their bass to plug into my gear for comparision
purposes. I'll supply the beer... ;-)
If you think you can help me out, let me know...
-Tom
|
2215.14 | Remotely diagnoser. | AKOV05::DERRICO | Stand and deliver! | Tue Jun 04 1991 12:47 | 21 |
| Tom,
I'll start with "20-Questions"...
When have you changed your strings last? I've found that they can
go dead pretty darn quick.
What are you using for a recorder? What does it have for tone
controls?
What kind of tapes are you using in your recorder? Is the Yuck-Tone
you're getting even before you are recording?
Do you have, or are you using DBX or Dolby on your recordings?
How does your bass sound through your amp? Do you have the sound you
want through that?
Is your bass wired right? ie; are your P-U's wired "In-Phase?
/John
|
2215.15 | boom boom boom thud | ZEKE::MEMBRINO | gladHouse in -91 | Tue Jun 04 1991 13:03 | 11 |
| -Tom,
I have to ask the same question as .14, When was the last time you
changed your strings? I have always noticed that the low E string
tends to go dead much faster than the other 3.
I notice that dynamics as well as sustain decrease beyond belief.
I wonder if it has something to do with the size of the windings
on the string?
chUck
|
2215.16 | Some Data | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue Jun 04 1991 13:19 | 30 |
|
re: .14
The strings I'm using are reasonably new, maybe a month old. In any
case, it doesn't sound dead to me. The deck is a tascam 424, with a
2 band hi/lo eq per track. I use either TDK or Maxell chrome tapes.
BTW, the deck bas DBX, not dolby.
As far as the amp sounds, I guess it's ok, but I don't do that much anymore.
I've been reasonably pleased with the amp sound (I guess!).
Dunno about the pickups.
FWIW,
The signal path is:
PV MKVIII head (for EQ only, 9 band)
to
DBX 163X compressor
to
Deck
The EQ is set flat except for about a 5-10db boost at 120Hz and 660hz.
The EQ on the deck is flat as well.
I've tried lots of combinations of EQ and component ordering, without
any success.
|
2215.17 | listen to those harmonics | ZEKE::MEMBRINO | four > six | Tue Jun 04 1991 13:38 | 11 |
| Tom,
Have you tried recording withOUT the compressor?
Maybe the compressor is taking a lot of the overtones that are
being generated from the E + A strings, (due to resonance, strings,
etc.) and causing the muddy tone.
When I record, I use a compressor VERY sparingly (sp?)
chUck
|
2215.18 | Perhaps the problem is in the evaluation process | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Tue Jun 04 1991 14:04 | 21 |
| Tom,
Something occurred to me.
Is the process you are using to critique the bass sound to record a bass
track and then listen to it in isolation (by itself), rather than in
context (with the other parts)?
If that's the case, you may be going thru a lot of concern over this.
My experience has always been that you have to evaluate tracks (both for
their performance and their sound) in the intended context.
My guess is that if I were to take the bass track from, say, the
factory demo that came with one of my synths and play it for you
with all other tracks muted, you'd almost certainly say (as I did),
"that doesn't sound anything like a real bass".
And yet in context it sounds killer.
db
|
2215.19 | | SMURF::GALLO | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue Jun 04 1991 14:51 | 13 |
|
Dave,
I've listened both to the sound in context as well as out and
I'm not happy on either count.
I won't disagree that the problem may be "expectations" rather
than the actual sound.
Geez, this is supposed to be easy.. ;-)
-t
|
2215.20 | ... | GIAMEM::DERRICO | Stand and deliver! | Tue Jun 04 1991 14:57 | 10 |
| Tom,
How often have you used your bass (maybe in "hours")? I've had
those strings go in a day - with heavy playing.
You may also have been squashing your sound with too much
compression - as mentioned earlier.
/J
|
2215.21 | Have you tried other basses? | GROOVE::DADDIECO | That's Just The Way It Is ..... | Tue Jun 04 1991 15:08 | 10 |
| Tom:
You may want to try the ole "A/B" test.
If you want to do some comparisons I'd be happy to offer my bass
guitars to you for a test.
Give me a call if you're interested.
Dan
|
2215.22 | Yah... | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | Greee Veee King | Tue Jun 04 1991 17:03 | 10 |
|
Tom, I'm reacting to your "this is supposed to be easy" comment. I
don't know dink about recording, but I've always heard people who do
say that recording bass isn't easy.. Lemme ask a dumb question... for
my own info... if you're happy with your amp sound, why don't you just
mike it into your tape deck?
Steve (noveau sound and bass dude)
|
2215.23 | One reason among many | SMURF::GALLO | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Tue Jun 04 1991 17:06 | 14 |
|
re: .-1
Recording with a mic requires that you have the room to
mic a bass amp at a volume loud enough to get a good tone.
Since I do most of my recording *after* the kids are
asleep....
You get the picture..
-T
|
2215.24 | i had that deck & that problem | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Al Bundy for Gov' | Tue Jun 04 1991 17:16 | 20 |
|
tom...
I just got my 424 last month, and then spent a week trying to
put down bass sounds i could live with. Eventually, i cranked the
lo-eq 90 degrees to the left, kept the hi-eq at or above 0, and
kept my levels not too far in the red.
Even after all that, plus a bounce with drums and synth brass,
i still keep the lo-eq low on playback.
However, this was not the case on another track i did - flat levels
worked fine, and damned if i remember what i did different.
Keep in mind this is all played on a bass that you might buy at
K-Mart. I've recorded good bass on strings that were older than my
kids. I just think you are experiencing the powers of a better
machine.
bob
|
2215.25 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Wed Jun 05 1991 13:28 | 9 |
| If you're getting alot of wierd overtones you might try lowering the
pickups. All single coils to some extent, get wierd overtones, on
strats they get worse the higher you go up the neck on the lower
strings with the low e being awful on many/most strats past the 12th or
14th fret.
FWIW
dbii
|
2215.27 | Please *move* the pickup discussion! | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Wed Jun 05 1991 15:03 | 11 |
|
re: Pickups
Could we *please* continue the issue of pickups somewhere else?
Dave has a valid point about the pickup height, but the general
discussion about pickups belong elsewhere.
-Tom
|
2215.28 | Some Data | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Wed Jun 05 1991 15:10 | 17 |
|
To continue with the *real* topic at hand.. ;^)
Dan Daddieco was kind enough to bring his basses over
last night for a little A/B and surprisingly his gear (PV w/EMGs)
didn't sound much different than mine.
His "A" was a little tighter and the overall output was a little
stronger, but that was just due to the actives.
It sounds better w/o the compressor, but it's hard to get enough
level on the tape w/o it, so there's a catch-22.. ;^(
db has volunteered his studio to check out my bass on someone
elses gear. That should provide the final piece of the puzzle.
-T
|
2215.29 | as soon as figure out how | LEDS::BURATI | No Gain No Pain | Wed Jun 05 1991 15:11 | 3 |
| >Could we *please* continue the issue of pickups somewhere else?
A thousand pardons.
|
2215.30 | Quitchyorbitchin | SALEM::DACUNHA | | Wed Jun 05 1991 16:32 | 8 |
|
Well, *I* happen to think the subject of pickups
is of the UTMOST relevence to the topic at hand.
Hmmph!!
|
2215.31 | And no I won't quit... | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Wed Jun 05 1991 16:52 | 13 |
|
re:.-1
Tell me string pull problems and humbucking pickups on
guitars have to do with this?
There is a note #31 dedicated to pickups. It's perfectly
reasonable to continue this side-discussion on pickups
there.
Like I said, Dave Bottom's makes a valid point, but the
entire discussion of pickup string pull belongs elsewhere..
|
2215.32 | Twas a valid observation | ROYALT::TASSINARI | Bob | Wed Jun 05 1991 17:08 | 6 |
|
I happen to agree that pickup height is a possibility but then that's
another note. ;-)
Chill....
|
2215.33 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Wed Jun 05 1991 22:37 | 19 |
| I recently went through some pain recording my bass. I have a fender
bullet p-bass with the original and very cheap pickups.
What I ended up doing was this. I ran it through my testerossa clean
and used hte intellifex to give it a small amount of reverb. I used my
symetrics to hard limit it rather than compress it to keep within the
dynamic range of my 688. I boosted both the hi-mids and the treble on
record and cut them approximately the same amount on mixdown. This was
to give the dbx some high end to fool with on that channel. I close
miked it with an AKG D320 vocal mike (about all I have around the
studio). I used my rivera cab with a 70w celestion. I was probably
running under 15watts as my family was upstairs asleep, but you never
know :-)
I had tried going straight into the board bu just couldn't get a warm
enough sound. This was the best I was able to get, it is far from ideal
though, but the bass track is not buried in muddiness or clangy bright.
dbii
|
2215.34 | | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Thu Jun 06 1991 08:08 | 10 |
|
re: limiting
You're not the first person to mention this. Iwonder if I
should dump the compressor and try to find a compressor/limiter?
How's the low strings (E and A) definition?
-T
|
2215.35 | reformed ratholist | LEDS::BURATI | Spanish Castle Magic | Thu Jun 06 1991 11:31 | 9 |
|
re: limiting
I'd at least borrow a limiter and try it. I've (my former band)
have done some very good quality studio stuff w/o any compressor.
Just a limiter. This was I'm sure due to the engineer's preference.
I don't have enough experience behind the board to make a judgement on
the merits of limiting over compressing. But I've heard a lot of badly
used compressors.
|
2215.36 | Bass Rockman..1 vote here | OTOA01::ELLACOTT | pancake maverick | Thu Jun 06 1991 13:10 | 12 |
| Just did some recording last night. I normally use an AMPEG SVT
head into a Peavey 1508 cab (a 15" and two 8"s) to play through. For
the recording though I used a Bass Rockman with a little EQ on the
output. The Rockman does a good job of limiting and adds just enough
compression to keep it tight and keep the dynamics. The only problem
with the box is it does not have all the tonal variation that I
want, hence the EQ to add a little extra top and bottom. I have found
that the bass direct into the mixer or what have you tends to be very
peaky and either too thick or too thin as far as eq from the mixer.
FJE
|
2215.37 | | RGB::ROST | Jimmy Blanton's love child | Fri Jun 07 1991 12:00 | 6 |
| Re: .10
I lied. I meant dbx 166, not 163. The 166 is a stereo, full featured
compressor/limiter/gate, the 163 is the little "over easy" box.
Brian
|
2215.38 | | WASTED::tomg | Danger: Slow Thinker at Work | Fri Jun 07 1991 13:21 | 9 |
|
One thing I've definitely decided to do is go "active" with
an EMG P bass active pickup. I really liked the sound of
Dan D's Peavy with the EMG, I mean *really* liked it.
-T
|
2215.39 | Where to add EQ/efx | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Nice on ice | Mon Jun 10 1991 12:07 | 8 |
| re: .33
Dave, you said in this note that you added a little reverb, EQ, and
hard limited the signal. That all makes sense, but I was wondering
where you did it. In the signal chain between the preamp and the power
amp (ie before the miked speaker) or between the mike and the deck?
Greg
|
2215.40 | Limiter selection | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Nice on ice | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:39 | 5 |
| Also, do any of you have recommendations on limiters to use for this?
Would it be better to buy a higher end unit like the Symmetrix or would
a stomp box like the Boss LM-2 do?
Greg
|
2215.41 | EFX go in the mix - compressor/limiters | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:47 | 28 |
| Two small things: conventional wisdom is to NEVER add reverb on the
tape itself. Add it in the mix.
EQ can be added to the tape, but I would only do it to solve a problem
with the recorder itself. It's not considered uncommon, for example,
to boost the highs a bit going on to the tape because tape tends to
suppress the highs (especially with CERTAIN noise reduction systems).
Re: getting a "compressor/limiter" instead of a "compressor".
"Compression" and "Limiting" are really two variations of the same
effect.
Compression is a reduction in signal strength whenever the signal
goes above a "threshold". The amount of compression applied is
expressed in terms of a "compression ratio":
A ratio of 4 to 1 means that if the input signal goes 4db above
the threshold, it will be trimmed back to 1db.
"Limiting" is just compression with a compression ration of
infinity-to-1. It basically means that a ceiling is enforced
on the input signal: it will not allow it to go above the threshold.
Note that "compressor/limiters" won't do both compression and limiting
simultaneously (the ones I know anyway).
It's hard to imagine that any problem you're having requiring the
overall sound will be solved with limiting.
|
2215.42 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:49 | 4 |
| Reverb and eq were done pre-mixer/tape_deck. The limiting was on a channel
insert at the board.
dbii
|
2215.43 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:53 | 17 |
| re: reverb in the mix
That presupposes that I've got 6-8 reverb units that I can set up independantly
at mix down time. For those of us with only 3 or 4, some compromises must be
made. If you hadn't guessed I tend to reverb everything a bit here and there.
I'm an idealist, but an underfunded one...:-)
re: compressors
I think a high end unit is very useful, if you own a multi-track deck you
really need one to get good results. However, financial considerations have
caused me to buy less than ideal along the way...There are some very nice
comp/limiter boxes for pretty reasonable prices out there.
dbii
|
2215.44 | | RGB::ROST | Jimmy Blanton's love child | Mon Jun 10 1991 14:07 | 28 |
| The limiter I use, is as I have mentioned ad nauseum, an old Sony tape
deck. It has a prest limiter built in, basically you set the (record)
levels on the deck, and when you turn on the limiter, it locks
everything at 0 VU. This seems to work fine, probably for a number of
reasons:
1. It was built specifically for taping onto cassettes.
2. The record level becomes your "threshold" control.
If the stomp box unit is *quiet* enough, go for it.
Another source of a cheap limiter is the old dbx 119, which was a
comp/limit box sold for use with stereos back in the 70s. I see them
selling used in the want ads in the $50 range.
I also agree with dbii about high end boxes; the dbx 166 I mentioned
sells for about $350-400, but it has *two* units in one box, so can
handle two tracks at the same time or work on a stereo mix, will do
either compression or limiting and has a noise gate built in. Add all
that up and compare that to the dbx 163 at $120 and the 166 doesn't
seem so expensive in the long run.
It all boils down to whether or not you have the $$; after all we're
talking about doing home demos on cassettes, not producing the next
Paula Abdul album.
Brian
|
2215.45 | I only have one | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Tue Jun 11 1991 11:08 | 7 |
| >That presupposes that I've got 6-8 reverb units that I can set up independantly
>at mix down time. For those of us with only 3 or 4, some compromises must be
>made.
Huh?
You completely lost me. Why do you need 6-8 reverbs?
|
2215.46 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Tue Jun 11 1991 11:22 | 12 |
| 'cus I've got essentially 9 tracks (two virtual and 8-1 sync track). I use
reverb on nearly everything, guitars, bass, vocals. I put a slight verb
on most tracks when I record them, if they don't sound right I do them over.
Since I have the luxury fo so many tracks I don't bounce tracks down to get
more room. My midiverbII is dedicated to my hr16 now and the quadraverb is
used on both record and mixdown. If I recorded everything dry I would not get
the sound I get and lately it's been pretty good.
If you have 6-8 digital reverbs then you can be elitist and not put any effect
on tape, use poo' folk gotta compromise...
dbii :-)
|
2215.47 | Use those effects sends | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:22 | 8 |
| Dave,
I get the impression that you aren't using the effects sends on your
mixer (I know it has them).
There's no reason why you can't apply a single reverb to multiple tracks
at mixdown time. You can even apply different levels of reverb
(wet/dry).
|
2215.48 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Wed Jun 12 1991 13:56 | 11 |
| Yes I do use the effects sends but if I want reverb/chorus/echo on the
vocals, and I almost always don't verb up the vocals at record time
other than lightly, so I save my quad for that. So in order to get the
bass and guitar tracks wetted (so to speak) I do it when I record. The
HR-16 lives in the virtual tracks, sync'd to midi, so the verb for that
is always in use. Actually I wish I did have a couple more digital
multi-effects units. Like that ART DR-X I've been fooling with, nice
product, but now my funds are going into studio floor space expansion.
Drum booth etc..
dbii
|
2215.49 | | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Thu Jun 13 1991 06:29 | 8 |
| Hi Dave !
Could you comment on the DR-X a bit more (of course in the appropriate topic),
since it is the base for the ART SGX-2000, which I'm intersted in...
thanks a lot in advance
Richard
|
2215.50 | Whatever... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Fri Jun 14 1991 15:45 | 6 |
| re: .48
Dave,
I still don't get why you can't add all those effects at mixdown, but
more power to you.
|
2215.51 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Fri Jun 14 1991 16:23 | 6 |
| Dave I've only got two reverbs, in practice since one is dedicated to the Hr,
I only have one. I put different/effects reverbs on 6-8 tracks. I'd need 6-8
'verbs to record dry and add effects at mixdown time.
dbii
|
2215.52 | If that's what you like best, go with it | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Just say /NOOPT | Fri Jun 14 1991 17:35 | 14 |
| > Since one is dedicated to the HR
That's why I asked if you used the EFX sends. Why does it HAVE to be
dedicated to the HR?
> I put different/effects reverbs on 6-8 tracks. I'd need 6-8
> 'verbs to record dry and add effects at mixdown time.
Are you saying you put different kinds of REVERB on each track?
That's quite unconventional so that may be why I didn't understand
at first.
db
|
2215.53 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Mon Jun 17 1991 12:49 | 8 |
| The one dedicated to the HR is running a gated reverb, pretty useless IMHO
except for snares...
Yeah I do use slightly different reverbs for different tracks, and I also
almost always use echo on vocals, that I wouldn't want on the drums, bass
guitars etc.
dbii
|
2215.54 | | PEKING::BARKERN | Dries in minutes | Tue Jun 30 1992 06:08 | 26 |
| I'm going to open this topic up again hopefully by asking what do
people want when recording?
If you want fundamentally the same sound that you get live then why not
mike up your amp. If you mix this with a DI'd sound then not only will
you fatten the bass, but you're getting ths best of both worlds.
When recording my bass I always use a direct sound, and then two
SM58's one on the 15" speaker, and one on the port hole. That I then
mix on to two tracks and Bob is your uncle (as we say over here)
The bass is a Status Series II, but I sometimes record it passive (gets
a sort of Fenderish tone) I always have the pick up fader set leaning
towards the rear just to tighten up the tone, and always clean those
strings first. (Boiled with some detergent for 20 mins). No
compression on it (it always makes the note drag, you can do that
yourself with a finger pop etc.
Just my thoughts
Cheerio
Nigel
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