"Thank you so much friend. I like the idea of a mic in the middle of the room. I'll experiment. That never crossed my mind. Natural reverb."
Yeah your gonna have eight tracks, PLUS with what your doing with the keyboard...no reason not to take advantage of it.
"I have sequences I've done with my keyboard to play live. I intend to record the sequences straight into the Tascom, which hasn't arrived yet, and record the sax on a different track. Did you say record the sax on two tracks? "
Yup two tracks. Also record the keyboard on two ( pointless to say, lol but ive seen some folks sequence 16 tracks on a keyboard only to record the mono left ":/ ). ALSO check this...after you have your stereo keyboard tracks on the recorder, you can copy paste those two tracks to two more tracks ( lots of twos ). If you do this...you have the freedom for multi EQs, multi pans and so on.
Example of the advantage you would get with copy and paste is. Recall how I stated you could record everything independent to have greater control over the mix...well you can get the same results in part by doing this. For rough example lets say your keyboard has (drums,bass,organ,piano). WELL on your first two tracks, you could focus on EQing the (drums,bass >...on the other two tracks ( the copy pasted ones ), you could focus on EQing the (organ, piano).
Just more freedom for you to get what you want
"Like I mentioned before, Honky Tonk, Nighttrain and tunes that are played forte in the middle of the horn are much easier to record. The problem is the low C, B, and Bb being play in a sub-tone on slow pretty ballads, which are hard notes to pick up."
Ok check this out your close mic should be about a foot from the bell, low notes are HARD to pick up super close...you need a bit of space for the wave to develop where it can be picked up. Foot away on the close in combo with a room mic you shouldnt have a problem. This is one of the reasons multi mics is good...you dont have to capture EVERYTHING with one mic on one track, you have the freedom to mix multi sources to get one sound.
Also play around with your EQs on your mixer/recorder slightly to help pick up the notes you need. Some might tell you to record flat then add EQs in the mix, BUT why use EQs only after you recorded? Try to track the sound you want in the first place, boosting EQs and so on while tracking is going to yield dramatically different results then if you just EQ a recorded source. Only once again...your open to do whatever whenever however.
Speaking of EQs...depending on a ton of factors ( the room, the mics, the mixer ) your gonna run into some noise issues, also the factor of recording at a 16bit sample rate is going to lead to some things perhaps sounding a bit off. MOST all your noise is going to happen in the high eq range ( the room mic will suffer the worse from this ). So if you have some shhhhhhhhh or whatever on your track, roll the high EQ back a bit. You should be able to almost completely kill any unwanted noise, just know there is a balance of killing noise and keeping your frequency range open enough so you dont lose whatever good sound that is there.
"What about a mic by the bell, another mic at the bottom near the big key holes on the low notes and a room mic. Do you think this would be too many mics."
If you think you can swing it, I would say try it at the very least. Just know this, mic near the keyholes shouldn't be very predominant in the mix. More or less a general mix with three mics...I would put the close mix front and center, then soft pan the other two mics left and right and adjust their levels. With two mics room and close, I would soft pan and balance them.
The only slight issue your going to run into with three mics, the tascam only has two inputs...so you would be dependent on externally mixing the three tracks into two tracks to send to the recorder. NOT that big of a deal JUST if you do this your gonna have to make sure you track near exactly how you want the end result, as your doing a mini mix while tracking.
"You know your business I can see. I'm glad we're friends now, friend! I'm elated that I didn't delete this post as I almost did yesterday. "
hahaha no worries
"I like to joke around, but I don't like the long drawn out arguments. Thanks for your experience. If you want to know how to lay bricks, send me an email.
Boo Hargis"
Man you know...there might just be a point in time "
[This message has been edited by Alone&Forsaken (edited 01-05-2005).]