More tips on N Track Recording Studio
Author: DJEquip // Category: Recording Studio Equipment
First off, I’m no professional audio guru. I’m a nerd that does outdoor videos with his Canon 5d Mark II.
I don’t need to tell you about the technical aspects, but I will say that it does exactly as described. It also comes with a wind blocker so no need to buy one. The audio is great about picking up only the angle of degree you have it set to. I do some beach video and it was important that I didn’t pick up a lot of garbage from passerby’s, etc. If you’re right up on it of course you will hear outside noises but for interviews or specific sounds where your camera is pointed this is perfect. I also bought an adapter so I could put it on the hotshoe of my 5ds which helped. For the price this can’t be beat.
Bill
I’m recording my new rock n’ roll record with the band…and I keep speeding up slightly in certain parts of the song. The engineer suggests that I play along with a click track, which I’ve never done before, so I thought I would give it a shot. N Track Recording Studio At first, I’m going right along with it, but then it seems I just can’t stay right on the mark. I feel like I fall behind slightly, then I kind of speed up to get back on track. The engineer almost said it made things worse. Why is this so difficult? Should I just practice like no other for a few days in the studio? We got the studio booked for 3 months straight so I have nothing but time. As long as I’ve played/recorded, I’ve never went along to a click track. I know practicing is the ultimate key…but are there any other effective measures for keeping my tempo under control? Any tricks of the trade?
Powered by Yahoo! Answers
Related External Links

Tags: Canon, Canon 5d, Garbage, Guru, Hotshoe, Keyword, Nerd, Passerby, Studio 1, Technical Aspects, Track Recording Studio, Wind Blocker




















