Recording studio Equipment rack blogs

Author: DJEquip  //  Category: Yamaha Mixing Console
yamaha-mixing-console Recording studio Equipment rack blogs

I’m not a big Behringer fan but over the years I have used quite a few of their products. Most are lacking to say the least but a few are surprisingly good deals for the money. This little mixer I find to be the latter of those, surprisingly good for the money. I noticed the bad reviews so I needed to add, this mixer works great but only for certain applications. I would agree that this might not be a satisfactory choice for a rock band or home studio but for a small meeting room, theater or church, it works great. If you are looking for a bit of reverb for backing vocals the efx are OK but they are certainly nothing to write home about. If your application has you singing to tracks or your music situation consists of only a keyboard and/or acoustic guitar with a vocal or two, this unit should work fine. We used this unit for one of our company’s installs where it was hidden in a small custom wall rack where the rack door is actually a framed picture. Because of the size and type of

How to conduct a recording session?
Hey guys! How’s everyone doing? I’ve just got a couple of questions, first let me explain my situation. My band practices at a rehearsal studio which includes a maze of different rooms, some large, some small. The owner, a friend of my grandfathers, is giving me a large room to move all of my recording equipment into, and to record bands, and split the profit with him. I’m certified in Logic Pro, but i’ve just got a couple of questions. The first being, is what I have enough to make a some good recordings? Its been doing me good at home, this is what i’m moving into the studio room:-My Apple computer-M-Audio Recording studio Equipment rack BX8a speakers -Logic Pro 9 (i’m using Logic’s mixer, I feel it’s unnecessary to buy one)-PreSonus Firestudio Project Audio Interface-ART Pro MPAII Microphone Preamplifier-Furman M8X2 Merit Series Power Conditioner-4 Space Studio Rack-Drum Mic Kit-Dynamic microphones (For recording amps when necessary, though I usually use go direct line and use Logic’s heads, cabs, and pedalboards) -Audio Technica AT2020 Studio Microphone (Vocal Condensor mic for recording vocals)-All of the XLR and quarter inch cables I needNow I just want to know if all of that is good enough to record a band and get a good sound out of it. Please by all means suggest some other stuff I could or should add to this. Also, should I invest in buying a vocal booth?And, my last question is, how do I go about conducting a recording session? Should I have them all run through the song a couple times, do a rough scratch track of the song, and then start doing multi-track recording with the drums, and have the drummer listen to the scratch track when he’s recording? How do I go about that? I’m especially curious as to how I could have the drummer listen to the scratch track while he records. Unless anyone has some other methods. Thank you so much in advance to everyone who answers!Oh! I forgot, I also have a MiDi keyboard.
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