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#237895 - 07/12/08 06:26 AM
Re: how did you record your demo?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Lucky, The easiest, least expensive and, IMO, best way is to follow the instructions I posted at http://psrtutorial.com/L/REC/MakeCD.html . I suggest downloading the Beta version of Audacity, which is very good and allows multitrack recording and has outstanding editing features. 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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#237896 - 07/12/08 06:32 AM
Re: how did you record your demo?
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Admin
Registered: 06/01/98
Posts: 6484
Loc: Ventura CA USA
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#237901 - 07/12/08 02:54 PM
Re: how did you record your demo?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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It all depends on what you want the demo to be...
Do you want to capture your 'live' sound, warts and all? A simple two track recorder will do that fine.
Want to edit the performance to get rid of any flubs and clams, and then sing after it is recorded? You can still do that with a two-track. Record the arranger performance to the built-in sequencer. Edit there 'til the way you want it, then record to the two track and sing over the top of it at the same time. At least if you screw up the singing, the arranger parts are recorded, so you don't have to get both perfect at the same time..!
But if you want to get up to commercial release standards, even if using an arranger, a multi-track software can help put the 'pro' touches on you might need. In this scenario, you still record the arranger performance to the built-in sequencer. But then you transfer the SMF to your computer, and open it in the DAW program. You can now solo each individual track (after editing into shape) and record each arranger part separately. Even each drum sound or subgroup individually if you prefer. You can now do far more extensive EQ, compression, transient design, effects, and automation to make it more polished.
Then you can record the vocal, and use far better comps and eq's than are generally built-in to arrangers, plus a touch of Auto-tune if you need it. Be sparing, but it can do wonders without getting all Cher-like if you are careful! Now's a good time to add REAL backing vocals rather than the harmonizer, too, if you want that extra polish... (plus a real guitar part or horn can make it sound less arranger-like). You could even edit the sequence to make all the fills just a LITTLE bit different, add a little bit of variety to the repeated nature of the arranger.
How much you do is up to you, but amazing results can be done, with as much care as you'd use on a real band recording. But, unless you want a very simple 'this is me, live!', I would always recommend, at the very least, using the arranger's sequencer to make the initial 'capture', because it is the easiest to edit at this point. and then overdub the vocal afterwards (or record it at the same time you are playing back the edited sequence).
Most of us fall into the trap of having our own played parts and vocals louder than they need to be if you listen objectively, after the recording, and there's nothing you can do about this if you do a simple one take stereo recording. This two-step method at least stays close to being live, but allows easy fixing of these basic problems, as well as more complicated ones before the actual audio recording takes place...
Hope this helps.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#237902 - 07/12/08 08:48 PM
Re: how did you record your demo?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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In my case, I played the songs directly from my PSR-3000 into the PC and recorded the keyboard only. Then, I recorded the vocals on a separate stereo track. I didn't need to do much in the way of editing, but the ability to edit the vocals is there, which for some is a great asset. You cannot do this with a simple, two-track recording system unless everything is perfectly balanced--something that in most instances is quite rare. The beauty of recording in this manner is the ability to not only edit the vocals, but additionally, the ability to just delete the vocal track and do it again if necessary. This is NOT rocket science and DOES NOT require sophisticated software or a high-powered PC. You can record the song(s) as midi sequence files, edit them either on the keyboard or using PC software, then play they into the PC and record them as audio files. Again, the next step is to record your vocals, which can be fired through the keyboard's vocal processor, or fired through an inexpensive mixer with effects. When the finished product sounds the way you want, save it, then listen to it in your car while driving to work. If it still sounds good, compile the songs on a CD, print a high quality label, and send them out to prospective clients. Make sure you have your phone number, website, email address, etc on the CD lable so the person listening to the CD knows how to get in touch with you--THIS IS IMPORTANT! Also, when you record the songs, do full length recordings--NOT snippets of songs that fade from one 10-second segment to another. You would be amazed at how often that CD will be played in someone's car, then passed on to another person that does the hiring for musical entertainment. They want hear the entire song--not just a small sample. At least that has been my experience over the past couple decades. I'm in the process of making a new CD for sending out to current clients. At this point I really don't need new clients. Sending a new CD to my current clients is just a gesture that keeps me at the top of their performers list. 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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