Recording Yourself: What do you actually need?
We are back with a recording workshop! Today I want to at least try to give you a road map through the gazillion options you have of recording yourself! We want to enable you in different ways to record yourself, may it be for virtual masterclasses, for community challenges, to share with your friends and familie or - most importantly - as a reviewing tool for your very own practice! Who listens more carefully than yourself to your own recording, right?
I intend to spend a big portion of this livestream for questions, so let me know them in advance so I can prepare myself!
- What mics would I need?
- What mics in what price range are a good option?
- Can I record without a computer?
- What software options do I have for post production?
- What is an audio interface and why would I need one?
- What accessories are helpful or necessary for recording?
- Headphones or monitor speakers?
- AND YOUR QUESTIONS!
Join me going into full nerd-mode in this exciting livestream and let me know what YOU want to know!
[Please note the time, as US changes timezones on March 13, it might be on 1h earlier in i.e. EU timezones]
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I created a ...small cheat sheet for you guys to help for the decision making process! I might add a thing or two, but attempt to go over all these points in the livestream!
https://whimsical.com/recording-livestream-4rEiXVfnvVcpaKiicDG3jN
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And a little list FULL of Gear Recommendations!
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Great, Martin! I have a question:
What methods do we have to record and edit?
I don't know if I'm being having clear enough...
Let me see:
I can record 5 takes of a piece, from start to end, and choose the best one.
Or, I can record the same 5 takes (from start to end) but I decided to get some edits because there is a mistake in the best one.
Or, I can just play and if I have a mistake I went back in the piece (always recording) and with this source, I will make the edits.There is a better solution? Or is it just a personal choice? Thanks!
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Please discuss recording vs an interactive masterclass. Eg You showed us how to record video via (carefully placed 3-pt lighting / smartphone / Filmic pro) and simultaneously record audio via (carefully placed stereo microphones / interface / PC / Reaper) and later combine them with DaVinci Resolve. Given those tools what is the best strategy for an interactive zoom class?
Thx, Peter
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Martin Martin,
Hi Martin,This is slightly off-topic, but I'm deeply curious: what software do you use to do your Tonebase Livestream? In particular, I'm interested in how you do "split screen." Is that a proprietary Tonebase thing or is there an available software solution for regular folks like me? :)