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#113268 - 03/12/07 08:18 PM Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
MarcK Offline
Member

Registered: 07/27/01
Posts: 205
I have a small affair booked for this Thursday night, three hours or so of dinner music. Today the client calls me up and asks if the performance can be recorded. "Sure", I say.

My setup is just a PSR-3000 going into a Motion-Sound PA-80 speaker/amp.

Basically, I need some way to record this Thursday night that
1) Will work with my current setup (give or take wires and connectors)
2) Will record in stereo and with at least half-decent audio quality
3) Will not be a major expense (most of the modern, digital field recorders seem to be in the $200+ range)
4) Will be in my hands by Thursday.... (best would be something I could readily buy locally, but if need be I will order online Tuesday with 2nd-day shipping)

The best I can come up with is the Sony Pressman® Portable Cassette Recorder TCS-30D. However I cannot really tell whether or not the mic-in jack will properly handle a line coming from the PSR (say, from the headphone jack, or a split from the main line out) or a line coming from my amp (it has an XLR-out but I have a wide variety of adapters so I could probably "convert" it to a small mic-jack size). Does anyone know if this will work?

Thanks for your help!

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#113269 - 03/12/07 09:01 PM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
DonM Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 06/25/99
Posts: 16735
Loc: Benton, LA, USA
If you have a Stereo Hi-Fi VCR recorder around, it will work great. Just run a cable from the RCA outputs on the 3000 into proper connections to the Audio Inputs on the VCR.
You can then transfer the recordings to line-in on CD Recorder, Computer, Cassette Recorder or whatever.
I used one for several years and the quality is outstanding.
DonM
_________________________
DonM

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#113270 - 03/12/07 09:07 PM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
MarcK Offline
Member

Registered: 07/27/01
Posts: 205
That's an interesting idea. However I would certainly prefer something closer to pocket-sized.

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#113271 - 03/13/07 01:16 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
STAM Offline
Member

Registered: 10/27/01
Posts: 246
Loc: Brussels, BELGIUM
You can use a minidisk recorder. That gives a good quality and will take all the sound live

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#113272 - 03/13/07 05:58 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
travlin'easy Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
Marc,

You really don't need a digital recorder. The signal coming from the RCA outputs of the 3000 are analog. Any analog recorder will do the job. Then you can copy and edit the recording on your PC, save it to a CD or post it on Youtube.

Good Luck,

Gary

------------------
Travlin' Easy
_________________________
PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!

K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)

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#113273 - 03/13/07 06:40 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
DonM Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 06/25/99
Posts: 16735
Loc: Benton, LA, USA
I use Zoom H4. Previously used Creative Labs Nomad Jukebox (no longer made), and before that minidisk and even earlier cassettes. You can get good recordings with any of them.
The advantage to digital is easy upload to computer and easy to change formats from wav to MP3.
DonM
_________________________
DonM

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#113274 - 03/13/07 06:57 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
donpatt Offline
Member

Registered: 03/19/06
Posts: 465
Loc: Lufkin, TX.
Hi Group,

I use a Zoom H4 as well. I just bought it, and it took about 30 minutes to learn how to record.

I used it this weekend at the National Accordion Assoc. festival. I didn't eveen use line-ins, just used the built in mics. Of course, using this procedure, I picked up room noise and people talking during the performances, nevertheless, the quality of the H4 recording proved to be very good.

Look on Ebay,or Amazon

Don P
_________________________
GENOS, Roland FR-8X V Accordion, Bose Compacts.

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#113275 - 03/13/07 08:00 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
Diki Offline


Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
I'm just curious why the client wants it recorded.....

You need to be careful that their intent is not to have you play the engagement one time, then play back your recording for future events. Don't laugh... it happens!

If you need to go out and buy equipment, and spend time to make sure this gets recorded well, you should probably be in a position to ask something from the client as recompense. Possibly (if you can get them to admit they want to use it for entertainment purposes) even enough to cover the cost of the recorder, if inexpensive. Why should YOU lose money over this?

And, finally, there's nothing wrong with a good old fashioned cassette recorder if you get your levels right....!
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!

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#113276 - 03/13/07 11:07 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
tony mads usa Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 01/16/02
Posts: 14376
Loc: East Greenwich RI USA
Diki ... you stole my question ... that was the first thing that came to mind when I read the post ... ??? ... I was surprised there were 6 responses before the question was asked ...
t.
_________________________
t. cool

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#113277 - 03/13/07 11:14 AM Re: Urgent - live performance recording advice sought
MarcK Offline
Member

Registered: 07/27/01
Posts: 205
Quote:
Originally posted by Diki:
I'm just curious why the client wants it recorded.....

You need to be careful that their intent is not to have you play the engagement one time, then play back your recording for future events. Don't laugh... it happens!

If you need to go out and buy equipment, and spend time to make sure this gets recorded well, you should probably be in a position to ask something from the client as recompense. Possibly (if you can get them to admit they want to use it for entertainment purposes) even enough to cover the cost of the recorder, if inexpensive. Why should YOU lose money over this?

And, finally, there's nothing wrong with a good old fashioned cassette recorder if you get your levels right....!


Good point. For now I'm going with a $30 Sony cassette recorder, recording in mono, and the sound quality probably will not be all that great so I'm not really worried about it being useful in that sense. If I start doing weddings regularly (I am doing my first big one in a week and a half....), I will probably invest in a good digital recorder and either offer a 'professional-quality' recording of the music for a fee (say, extra $75?) or include it free and use it as a competitive bonus.

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