Week 1: Improve your Recording Skills
Join me for an exciting two-week intensive designed to enhance your recording skills, regardless of your starting point or the equipment you have at hand. Whether you're using a smartphone or a professional studio setup, this series will empower you with practical techniques and insider knowledge to achieve the best possible recordings.
What to Expect:
- Hands-On Experiments: Each assignment includes interactive experiments that focus on different aspects of recording— from mic placement to lighting. Learn by doing, and discover how slight adjustments can make a big difference in your final result.
- Expert Guidance: Led by Martin Zimny, the nerd behind all European tonebase productions, seasoned musician and audio-video professional, these sessions offer personalized tips and tricks tailored to the varied equipment setups of our participants.
- Community Interaction: Share your experiences, receive feedback from peers and your instructor, and engage in a supportive community of fellow music enthusiasts and aspiring producers.
No special equipment is needed to get started; just bring your enthusiasm and whatever recording tools you have—your journey to better recording begins here!
Timeline:
- Sign-Up : April 26th
- Course Period: April 29th - May 10th
- Optional check-In via Zoom: May 7th
Assignment Week 1
Understanding your room, understanding your Instrument, understanding the ambiance and reverberance!
Conduct these three experiment with your recording system:
- The Position of the Instrument within the Room
Record yourself in three different positions in the room, move the recording device with you and keep it stable relative to yourself - The relative position of the Microphone
Stay in one position in the room, but change the position relativ to your instrument. Keep the distance between the instrument and the microphone/smartphone the same. Choose three different mic positions. - The Distance of the Microphone to the instrument
Stay in one position in the room, keep the relative recording angle, but change the distance of the microphone three times.
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Danke, Martin.
I just got a Zoom H1n to get better dynamics compared to a smartphone. I'm looking for the right setup not only concerning sound quality but also to find an easy and quick way to listen to myself during practice. I'm less interested in video production. I think I'll have some time on sunday to do the 9 experiments.
Best, Ingo
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[Reposting here as I posted here in the wrong thread - the first assignment - removed from there]
Hi Martin, hello everyone, Francisco here :)
Martin, thanks for this course, I'm sure I'll learn a lot from you and the community!
I'm not a total beginner in recording, but also I'm not a professional. This my setup:
* Motu M2
* Rode NT1-A condenser mic
* AKG K-240 studio for monitoring/editting.
* I record usually with Logic Pro (on a mac)
* My videos: currently my iPhone 14 Pro Max.
I have some video recordings already posted in the social media. The video I'm sharing here was recorded this week.
I have a very small room. The microphone stays attached to my laptop table with a movable rode arm. I have flexibility to vary the mic position between anywhere very close to the guitar up to 1,5-1,7 meters away from it. To experiment beyond that would be a lot of work screwing and moving the arm around.
I usually place it between this range 1-1,5 meters, but each recording gets a slightly different position. I thought about making some marks to have it more consistent across recordings, but I guess I'm still experimenting :). Behind the mic I have a window with a heavy curtain (it absorbs some frequencies) and it's the corner of the room already, with a low cabinet. I also place the mic very similar to what was mentioned in the intro video, angle sideways, and also some front inclination (much like the camera positioning). As you can see, I sit on a couch (which has the perfect height for me to play/practice). The couch also absorbs some of the reverberation from the sounds that leaves the guitar towards my back/back wall. This helps.
I usually put the gain of my recording interface around 50-60% - that usually prevents clipping and any adjustment in the DAW - I always do some forte strums to check for clippings.
My post processing:After capturing the raw audio on a logic track, I send it to 2 buses:
Bus 1. Dynamics -> Compressor -> Stereo and load the "Classic Guitar" preset. The send level is around -2.5.
Bus 2. Reverb -> ChromaVerb -> Stereo and load the "Guitar Chamber" preset. The send level is around -7.
Then I add the video I recorded with my iPhone. I synchronise it very manually. Some videos I feel that the sync isn'g great. How do you guys do that? I often get 29,7 vs 30 fps mismatches between my audio project and the video recording. After sync I mute the original audio track from the video, recorded by the iPhone (I completely ignore it - but should I?) and "File -> Movie -> Export Audio to Movie". Logic then overrides the original audio and saves a new video. That's it.
What I expect from this course?
I want to improve of course! What do you think of this video? Did you like the guitar sound? Am I using too much reverb? I'm playing in a small room, but sounding like a small chapel? (that was the original idea anyway haha). How can I synchronise professionally an audio track with a video recording?
And also, I want to expand my video recording capabilities. I'm planning to invest on an additional camera and also in some video editing software this year. Although I have a small room, what would be my possibilities of different angles given the focal distance limitations? What could be some ideas of light use? I love videos with 2 or more angles, like right and left hand close-ups, guitar fret close ups and etc.
And what about you guys? I'm looking forward to hear from you all! -
Hi Martin, hi everyone
I completed my assignments and found that experiment No.2 in the second position sounded the best to me. It gave my guitar a more natural sound. What do you think?
I didn't adjust the sound levels in the DAW, so it's a little bit quieter.
Equipment used:
· Mic - Sontronics STC-2
· Interface - Focusrite Scarlet 2i2
· Classical guitar – handmade by M.Sabljić
· Camera – GoPro 10
The software used for recording and video editing:
· Reaper DAW
· Premier Pro
Best regards to all, Mladen
Experiment No.1
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1acYK4GDjM63jvOYEc-4M4Ochp_uOMgcy/view?usp=sharing
Experiment No.2
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1N93FrgC0l2p9Niv_EtQmA2GpCAGiZuIW/view?usp=sharing
Experiment No.3
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1fw90Z4KPafwm4vki6mQe1dNj4sQmR9uk/view?usp=sharing
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This is really an interesting experiment and I'm surprised at how such minor changes can have a dramatic impact. I do have a question about levels. When I start to introduce some distance between the guitar and mic, it might sound very good to me but my meter shows normal playing sits around -12db or lower unless I start bumping up the gain which introduces a lot of noise (by the way for this I'm using a pair of Rode M5's, a Focusrite 2i2, and Reaper). I was always under the impression that you had to record at the highest levels possible without clipping, so are these lower levels normal for classical guitar? And if so, is there way to increase the volume cleanly in "post"? Thanks for doing this.
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Hi Everyone, Thanks for doing this course. I am always looking at ways to improve. I have been creating Guitar videos for many years now. It seems that every video in regards to camera angles has always been a crap shoot. I haven't found a system yet that works. I would like your feedback and any tips regarding, Camera angles, video editing, Mic placement, and EQ. Currently I have a simple home studio with two cameras, two mics, interface and DAW. Here is a vid I made for the Carcassi Challenge last month but it took me longer to finish then the course was over. I am open to any feedback and/or comments. Enjoy! https://youtu.be/DZdOE6vIVCA
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Exercise with three microphone distances; approx 20° off to player's RHS in each case. An X-Y stereo pair configuration was used.
- 65 cm from instrument; 125 cm from floor
- 120 cm from instrument; 125 cm from floor
- 160 cm from instrument; 125 cm from floor
GarageBand Screen captures show EQ and compression settings. A small amount of reverb was used.