I. The First Steps // JAN 11th
Welcome fellow tonebase academists!
This is the place where we will talk about the first lesson of our recording course. Please use this thread if you have any questions concerning the workbook or general questions concerning the first steps!
Click here to access Session 1: The First Steps // Jan 11th (Live!)
Find the other sessions here: Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
Make sure to download our DAW of choice using the link below:
The DAW is free to use for 60 days. After that, you can still always prolong the evaluation period. Though a little bit daunting at first, the routing is pretty straight forward once we get accustomed to follow the signal flow!
Download the first workbook here
I will post the answers to the questionnaire on Jan 17th!
After the livestream, submit your assignments by replying to this thread!
Answers to the questionnaire:
What is a DAW?
- digital audio workstation like Reaper, a place where you can record, listen, and edit audio that is either being recorded or imported. Items in the arranger window reference files on your hard drive, so working within the DAW is (generally) non-destructive.
What is the difference between a USB-Microphone compared to a microphone that is connected to an audio interface?
- An audio interface converts analog voltage into discrete digital values for recording and vice versa for monitoring and playback. While an audio interface requires a microphone to record changes in air pressure, an USB-Mic usually comes already equippmed with some kind of AD/DA converter (aka audio interface). Since a computer usually can handle only one interface at a time, professionals use audio interfaces that have a multitude of digital and analog input and output channels.
What describes the Polar Pattern of a Microphone?
- A microphone's polar pattern describes its sensitivity for sounds arriving from different angles. The most popular polar patterns for music are cardioid, omnidirectional and figure of eight, though every polar pattern or directionality is being heavily used in professional productions in order to to achieve either spaciousness and enveleopment or speration and directivity.
See you tomorrow for "The Edit"!
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Thanks your a wizard at all this!
1. how do I tame some of the low boominess I get on certain notes in playback?
(single usb mic, cardioid, 24 inches on axis, at the bridge, classical guitar)
2. can it all be eq'd out after, or should this be mostly fixed in the setup?
3. suggestions for recording video to a track in parallel, separately?
4. Can I take a video recording and edit/fix the sound to it in reaper?
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Hi Martin
I've imported a backing tracking into reaper and I have the output jack input to a guitar amp So I can play backing tracks and guitar through the amp into headphones. All good so far. I then thought I'd try to record the amp using my Tascam mobile recorder as audio interface into reaper to record the guitar onto its own track. Result: feedback so can only do at really low volume.Is there any way round this aside from using a different laptop as input to the amp for the backing track? My usb i/f also seems to drop out occasionally so I lose the mic - rubbish gear I suppose. Very annoying
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Hello, first thank you for a great session this week.
I have two questions.
The first is easy. My mixer is missing from my main screen in Reaper. It is available if I open it in a floating window, but I cannot work out how to display it fixed at bottom left of the screen. Can you help with that please.
second, as I explained during the meeting I currently use one small directional condenser mic ( mshurr sm81) and a larger condenser mic that allows me to shift from Omni directional to figure of 8 or cardioid. AKG p420
I like the sound of the shure as the main focus with the other mic picking up the sound at a little more distance, but I see you use 2 mics for the main near field recording. Would you recommend me getting a second Shure mic? Or is that over the top.
many thanks Peter
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Hi Martin,
I see that the audio I record in Imovie has a sample rate of 48 kHz and 24 Bits per sample when I export the file as a .wav file. I could then import to Reaper to edit the file. This way I can record the video and audio on my macbook with Imovie and not have to mess around with another camera. Is there any problem with this workflow? Any benefit to recording with my Focusrite Scarlett directly into Reaper instead of in to Imovie? thanks in advance, William
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Thanks for the quick reply Martin. I am starting to record some videos of myself playing and its just a lot easier to push start/stop on one device and have the audio and video already synced versus downloading the video from the camera to the laptop and then syncing the audio. Any idea if you can hook up and video camera and record audio and video into Reaper just as I do in Imovie?
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Hi martin ,
I've bought a H4N Pro for my first steps in recording (fairly budget friendly). Getting it available in Reaper was as simple as plugging in the USB-cable and selecting some options and it just simply works (I'm on Mac BTW). One thing I'm struggling with is the volume of the recording. I recall you saying it should range in the -6dB and -12dB range. If I try playing extremely loud it ends up somewhere in that range but that doesn't leave a whole lot of room for dynamics :) How far should I place the mic from my guitar (it's at 30cm or so ATM)? What other options are available?
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Hello Martin,
I have two questions:
1) how do you quickly delete a take?
2) What brand of microphone stand are you using? Specifically, the boom that holds the pair of microphones. I have one but it is too wide. The minimum span is 48 cm. I have a pair of Rode NT-5’s but I didn’t record because the distance between the mics would be too far away. Maybe I should just record anyway in order to do the assignment but I didn’t want to work with a crappy sound. Sad face.Thanks!
Debbie
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Answers to the questionnaire:
What is a DAW?
- digital audio workstation like Reaper, a place where you can record, listen, and edit audio that is either being recorded or imported. Items in the arranger window reference files on your hard drive, so working within the DAW is (generally) non-destructive.
What is the difference between a USB-Microphone compared to a microphone that is connected to an audio interface?
- An audio interface converts analog voltage into discrete digital values for recording and vice versa for monitoring and playback. While an audio interface requires a microphone to record changes in air pressure, an USB-Mic usually comes already equippmed with some kind of AD/DA converter (aka audio interface). Since a computer usually can handle only one interface at a time, professionals use audio interfaces that have a multitude of digital and analog input and output channels.
What describes the Polar Pattern of a Microphone?
- A microphone's polar pattern describes its sensitivity for sounds arriving from different angles. The most popular polar patterns for music are cardioid, omnidirectional and figure of eight, though every polar pattern or directionality is being heavily used in professional productions in order to to achieve either spaciousness and enveleopment or speration and directivity.
See you tomorrow for "The Edit"!