Sounds like you know this stuff pretty good already. My tips would be - experiment! Record a simple thing in a variety of ways, and make notes for each recording. Then pick the technique you used where it sounds the best!
I'm going to try to gets some clips of my amps up in the near future.
But I need some tips on getting good guitar sounds recorded.
Here's what I have to work with:
Small Behringer mixer/mic pre
Sure SM-58 mic
EV mic (no model # on it)
mic stand w/boom
Behringer UCA202 A/D converter with USB out
Behringer GI100 DI box/cab simulator
Audacity & Reaper DAW.
Here's how I usually hook things up:
speaker cab > mic > mic pre > A/D converter > USB into computer (bypasses sound card) > Audacity
I've gotten mixed results in the past.
Any tips on miking and/or setup to get the best sound?
tung
- Dave Lizewski, Kick-A$$I was just a regular guy. My only super power was being invisible to girls.
Sounds like you know this stuff pretty good already. My tips would be - experiment! Record a simple thing in a variety of ways, and make notes for each recording. Then pick the technique you used where it sounds the best!
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Put on your headphones and move the mic around to find the best sound before recording and do what Robert says about making notes so that you can recreate whatever works with ease.
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What is a Audacity and a Reaper DAW?Sumi
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They are computer-based recording programs. DAW = digital audio workstation, i.e, computer based.Originally Posted by sumitomo
Free:
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Free to try, $50 to buy for personal use:
http://www.reaper.fm/
tung
- Dave Lizewski, Kick-A$$I was just a regular guy. My only super power was being invisible to girls.
Robert and Spudman,
Thanks for the advice. I don't have problems getting a good strong signal onto my PC, it's just that live it sounds great, but sounds crappy when recorded. I think my mic placement technique could use some work.
tung
- Dave Lizewski, Kick-A$$I was just a regular guy. My only super power was being invisible to girls.
I've done some number of hours of home recording directly out of an amplifier-simulator (a J-Station to be specific), but the one time I tried recording a live amp I could not get a sound close to what I hear out of the amp either. I need to play with mic placement, perhaps the acoustic of the room that I record in, etc., to see whether I can get better results another time.Originally Posted by tunghaichuan
Since you have multiple mics, you may even try miking up with more than one mic. I've heard of people getting good result doing it that way. Still mic placements will come into play.