On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 1:27 PM, James Stone <jamesmstone@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 06:21:57AM -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: >> <SNIP> >> I did not realize that you were paying for that space. That makes a >> huge difference. VERY difficult and expensive to pay for an education >> that way. > > Yes.. a bit of a shame > >> >> What the chance of doing some individual tracking at one of your >> houses/flats, etc.? Leave the practice space as the place you get loud >> as a band but do some of this where you can spend more time and be a >> little more reflective? >> > > Sounds like a good idea. Only problem is we all live at different > places across London, and getting together for our weekly > rehearsal is difficult enough. I will run by the idea of meeting > at the drummers house instead of at the studio with the other > members and see how feasible it would be. We will be even more > limited with mics and amps but it still seems like a good idea to > me. Will let you know how it goes with that. > #1 reason for why I own a Guitar Rig. I get my guitar & bass sounds without any noise. Sounds are good enough for my needs. Can work anywhere I happen to be. Yeah, it's Windows, but so what? It's a tool on one or four computers, not a life style, and it allows me to use Ardour for what I think it does best. Consider something like: 1) The band tracks a good performance in the practice space. The issue is performance more than recording quality. Capture what you want you are looking for in terms of timing, etc. Record the whole practice session using Ardour in case something great happens. 2) Back at your houses overdub individual tracks for guitar, bass, synths, keys, vocals, extras outside the practice space using Guitar Rig, electronic drum pads, Alsa synths ala MIDI & Linus, etc. 3) Rough mix the overdubs with an ear toward eventually removing the live session completely. 4) Back in the practice space, or in a studio for pay, record final drums. 5) Final mix removing original session completely. I've done stuff like this for years. It works and in terms of being forced to be quiet most of the time works great for me in terms of producing good demo quality/semi-pro results. Works better as you are able to record more tracks at practice. Currently you are limited to two, I think, but over time you can upgrade equipment to 4 or 8 tracks at step #1 and then you can weed out stuff as you need to. Just ideas. Have fun. - Mark _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user