A BASIC Home drum recording rig
Posted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 10:24 pm
What's up guys, sorry I'm not around as much as I used to be, I'll try to correct that (I had 500 or so posts on the old board.)
You are a pretty hi tech bunch here so I figured that I would run this past you.
I want to create a pretty basic recording rig at home (NOT for tracking as much as for teaching, practicing, recording gigs, etc.) For recording gigs I am thinking about the new Zoom Q3 HD (as a stand alone solution.)
But at my home (teaching, practice, and rehearsal, NOT recording per se) studio I am going to keep a board, and my spare set of drum mics up to record students, rehearsals, and my own practice. I was thinking of this "basic" rig.
The signal chain that I am thinking about (and looking for input about) is this: Put my (spare) 2 Shure 137 OH's, Beta 52, and a 57 through a Mackie Profx12, come out of the profx into the audio aux in on the Zoom, and capture video and audio (or just audio, because the Zoom can apparently do that.)
If I "eventually" wanted to, the Mackie has a USB out that I "guess" (the literature in the Mackie says you can at least) I could go right to my Mac and record live to 2 track type of stuff (maybe for good sounding rehearsal mixes) but that's not a priority right now. I really don't want to tie up my computer with that stuff at the moment.
So do any of you have any experience with either the Zoom q3HD, or the Mackie Profx12? Because I haven't bought them yet. I have the (spare set of) mics sitting around, so lets not get into a whole mic discussion.
Has anyone used the aux in's with the q3HD for better sounding recordings? I have been told there is an issue with the gain switch-setting on the Zoom (low, high, and auto) and don't know how the aux in will work with that.
Lets not get into the difference between mic pre's etc. I am just using this as a teaching, practicing, and rehearsing tool. And I am just looking for low tech, basic ease of functionality, and good video and audio documentation, etc.
I know I could do all of this with the Zoom alone, but I have a decent amount of play alongs that students use for practice, and I figured with the board etc I could record them nicely with the play alongs, we could listen back, they could hear themselves, and we could talk about improvements.
Or for rehearsals (with the board) I could have the bassist go direct, maybe have a guitarist go direct through a pod or something, and mic up the rest of the acoustic instruments-vocals with the remaining channels, and keep everything through headphones (with a headphone amp.)
I'm anxious to hear any input, thoughts, suggestions, comments, etc, along those lines.
BIG Thanks (in advance,)
Mark
You are a pretty hi tech bunch here so I figured that I would run this past you.
I want to create a pretty basic recording rig at home (NOT for tracking as much as for teaching, practicing, recording gigs, etc.) For recording gigs I am thinking about the new Zoom Q3 HD (as a stand alone solution.)
But at my home (teaching, practice, and rehearsal, NOT recording per se) studio I am going to keep a board, and my spare set of drum mics up to record students, rehearsals, and my own practice. I was thinking of this "basic" rig.
The signal chain that I am thinking about (and looking for input about) is this: Put my (spare) 2 Shure 137 OH's, Beta 52, and a 57 through a Mackie Profx12, come out of the profx into the audio aux in on the Zoom, and capture video and audio (or just audio, because the Zoom can apparently do that.)
If I "eventually" wanted to, the Mackie has a USB out that I "guess" (the literature in the Mackie says you can at least) I could go right to my Mac and record live to 2 track type of stuff (maybe for good sounding rehearsal mixes) but that's not a priority right now. I really don't want to tie up my computer with that stuff at the moment.
So do any of you have any experience with either the Zoom q3HD, or the Mackie Profx12? Because I haven't bought them yet. I have the (spare set of) mics sitting around, so lets not get into a whole mic discussion.
Has anyone used the aux in's with the q3HD for better sounding recordings? I have been told there is an issue with the gain switch-setting on the Zoom (low, high, and auto) and don't know how the aux in will work with that.
Lets not get into the difference between mic pre's etc. I am just using this as a teaching, practicing, and rehearsing tool. And I am just looking for low tech, basic ease of functionality, and good video and audio documentation, etc.
I know I could do all of this with the Zoom alone, but I have a decent amount of play alongs that students use for practice, and I figured with the board etc I could record them nicely with the play alongs, we could listen back, they could hear themselves, and we could talk about improvements.
Or for rehearsals (with the board) I could have the bassist go direct, maybe have a guitarist go direct through a pod or something, and mic up the rest of the acoustic instruments-vocals with the remaining channels, and keep everything through headphones (with a headphone amp.)
I'm anxious to hear any input, thoughts, suggestions, comments, etc, along those lines.
BIG Thanks (in advance,)
Mark