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How To Record A 5-Piece Band "Live" Using D888 - S

 
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draker



Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Posts: 8

PostPosted: Mon Apr 28, 2008 11:46 pm    Post subject: How To Record A 5-Piece Band "Live" Using D888 - S Reply with quote

Can someone please help us determine what's the best approach to take when using a D888 to record five musicians (2 guitars, 1 bass, 1 keyboard and electronic drums - mono/stereo outs) all with vocal microphones for a single song? What instruments should we record first, what next and then, lead and backup vocals, etc? What tracks are bounced and where? And finally, when should you employ the use of virtual tracks?.

For example: If we have 5 musicians playing live, and we record the basic song on 5 inputs...we only have 3 tracks left. If we wanted to record a vocal at the same time -- lead or scratch track -- that puts us down to 2 tracks. And if we wanted to mix what we've done, wouldn't we need two tracks left to mix a L and R channel? And then what about backing vocals, lead guitars, etc? Do I need to get a 12 or 16-track DAW so we can sing and play and record simultaneously? The Beatles did everything on a 4-track, so we're thinking we should be able to figure out how do do our music on an 8-track!

The KORG D888 manual isn't great about this strategy and there doesn't seem to be another resource to use - and other digital recording books aren't specific enough for using the D888. Any suggestions are welcome. I apologize, as obviously, we're not that experienced recording, mixing and mastering, but we're having a tough time determining the best way to record our band live and get the tracks down to a stereo mix to burn a CD. Thank you in advance for any help, comments, resources.
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corvin666999



Joined: 29 Apr 2009
Posts: 3

PostPosted: Wed Apr 29, 2009 8:42 am    Post subject: depends on what you want Reply with quote

i f you are recording live, thne your mic placement needs to good. decide if you should mic the room or your insterments. if you are lining in to the bord then you wont have that problem. but if you are trying to get a finnished product ( such as a demo or a CD) then use your recoder as for what it built for, multi tracking. Record your beat tracks first (bass, drums ect ect). then do any keybord work done. next gutars than vocals. if you are adding any extra sounds or noises do that last. the best way to track everything is to have a computer program for mixing and soforth. so after you record all of your tracks and fill up your fist 8, save all the tracks to your hard drive. than bounce or master them down to only two tracks. then record as man more as you want using that same process. just keep saving your single tracks as you go. then when you have all the tracks you want, you just need to take the time to mix them down on you computer. but doing it in this way, your tracks are almost endless. i understand this explanation a a bit choppy but you should get the idea from it.
good luck
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