Originally posted by sonhouseStudies and sports, cars and 8-Ball Pool with the guys, girls and a part-time job became priorities which displaced weekly music lessons, even though I had advanced to triple/staccato notes and high octave scales. "Bugle Boy of Company B" (?); Begin the Beguine" (sp); and "Tuxedo Junction"; a few Vaughn Monroe scores and other Post War II Hits I remember having gained proficiency with to Mr. Womberg's satisfaction. Given away most of the 17 Paintings to family and friends locally and around the country. A few were favorably reviewed on Facebook but may have been deleted. Will see what I can do. -Bob
You stop playing when you got to HS? BTW, can you send me an image of one of your paintings? That is something I am terrible at. I can't draw a straight line with a ruler without making a bump from my thumb🙂
I play three bars of music a week, its actually the same bar, over and over, but the beer is quite good & the drinks are superb. I teach guitar at three Universities, only because I can't make enough money at just one. I also take odd jobs like Santa Trains, cocktail jazz hours, wedding ceremonies, Irish music , Klezmer music, classic screaming rock gigs.
Lotsa musicians ("musos" for those of you down under) here @ RHP. We should record a collective song. Someone start a riff, then send it on, next person adds an overdub, same, on & on.
Originally posted by gregsflatWhat site is good for that? Reverbnation? Soundcloud?
I play three bars of music a week, its actually the same bar, over and over, but the beer is quite good & the drinks are superb. I teach guitar at three Universities, only because I can't make enough money at just one. I also take odd jobs like Santa Trains, cocktail jazz hours, wedding ceremonies, Irish music , Klezmer music, classic screaming rock gigs ...[text shortened]... ective song. Someone start a riff, then send it on, next person adds an overdub, same, on & on.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoundCloud
I tried Reverbnation but found you can only upload 5 or six pieces for free. Not sure how much Soundcloud wants for full service. Soundcloud hooks into PreSonus But I use Cakewalk Sonar. Does that mean all the musicians would be forced to buy PreSonus?
Originally posted by gregsflatWhat do you call a person who hangs around with musicians?
We.d have to send .wav files to each other, then you could process however you like, the put it back into a wav file and send to the next person.
It would be best to start with the drums. Do we have a drummer in the house??? (at RHP)
A drummer.
How can you tell a drummer is at the door?
The knocking gets faster.
How can you tell a drummer is at the door?
He doesn't know when to come in?
Two tom-toms and a hi hat fell off a lorry.
Ba dum tish!
Sounds like a good idea. I could create a drum beat on my keyboard. Would be a bit plastic though. The real thing is always better.
Also if we keep dubbing over the top then won't a certain amount of noise build up and the sound quality be rubbish? Any ideas how to stop this?
Originally posted by Sicilian SausageMost modern keyboards use digital sound at least 16 bit, some 24, or more. If your keyboard is 16 bit you shouldn't have much noise added when you add tracks, you are starting out with a 90 db S/N ratio and 24 bit over 100.
What do you call a person who hangs around with musicians?
A drummer.
How can you tell a drummer is at the door?
The knocking gets faster.
How can you tell a drummer is at the door?
He doesn't know when to come in?
Two tom-toms and a hi hat fell off a lorry.
Ba dum tish!
Sounds like a good idea. I could create a drum beat on my keyboard. W ...[text shortened]... a certain amount of noise build up and the sound quality be rubbish? Any ideas how to stop this?
If you are using a mixer to add tracks to a recorder, a tape recorder, you will have more noise per added track because of the analog nature of tape, which is about 60 db S/N ratio and maybe 80 db S/N with Dolby.
The mixer is the weak spot of modern recording equipment. I use two recorders, one is a Boss BR1600 direct to HD recorder with 8 XLR inputs and the other is a traditional mixer going into a computer using Sonar X1 and an RME hammerfall I/O which does not have preamps so have to have a mixer and that will add some noise with each track.
With a mixer, the noise goes up with each extra track you use at the same time. So you can do your inputs one at a time, adding tracks to a DAW and you will minimize the added noise but that is time consuming.
You will get the best sound that way however.
I also have a 2 input I/O with 2 XLR mic ins with preamps, which is ok for a single person or a duo but if you record 3 or more people at once you need a higher level input box and the good ones have say, 8 XLR in's with mic preamps built in so you don't need a mixer, that also reduces the noise because they usually have very good preamps and at least 16 bit D/A's or better.
That's what the Boss BR1600 has but it goes way beyond just being an input box, it has a full effects set and records to a hard drive and has a built in CD burner so you can do the whole thing from start to finish on the one machine. You can get them on Ebay now for 600 bucks or so, I paid 400 at a hock shop, the owner was cringing when he found out they were going for hundreds more on Ebay but he was the one who set the price🙂
Originally posted by sonhouseDude, your gear is way beyond mine. I was thinking of using mics and line in on my sound card. I'm out grabbing lunch at the moment. I will see what I can knock together when I get home.
Most modern keyboards use digital sound at least 16 bit, some 24, or more. If your keyboard is 16 bit you shouldn't have much noise added when you add tracks, you are starting out with a 90 db S/N ratio and 24 bit over 100.
If you are using a mixer to add tracks to a recorder, a tape recorder, you will have more noise per added track because of the anal ...[text shortened]... en he found out they were going for hundreds more on Ebay but he was the one who set the price🙂