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									Hey guys, tons of new stuff - In The Studio				            </title>
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                        <title>RE: Hey guys, tons of new stuff</title>
                        <link>https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/hey-guys-tons-of-new-stuff/#post-160761</link>
                        <pubDate>Mon, 20 Feb 2006 13:07:50 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Hey Iza, good to hear you&#039;re still alive. The biggest thing, as Joe says, is mic placement. Placing a mic close to the speaker will result in a very different sound from what your two ears a...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Hey Iza, good to hear you're still alive. The biggest thing, as Joe says, is mic placement. Placing a mic close to the speaker will result in a very different sound from what your two ears are picking up. Experiment with using multiple mics are different positions so you can get the mostly dry signal of a mic close-up and more of the room and general sound with having mics further away. As for drums, get a drum mic-set and apply as indicated. Each part of the drum gets it's own channel so you're pretty free to do as you please.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/">In The Studio</category>                        <dc:creator>Ignar Hillström</dc:creator>
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                        <title>RE: Hey guys, tons of new stuff</title>
                        <link>https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/hey-guys-tons-of-new-stuff/#post-159816</link>
                        <pubDate>Thu, 16 Feb 2006 10:37:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[There lots of different ways you could do this. Mic placement can make a big difference in the out come. This you&#039;ll have to experiment with. My favorite thing to do with my guitar sound (ca...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[There lots of different ways you could do this. Mic placement can make a big difference in the out come. This you'll have to experiment with. My favorite thing to do with my guitar sound (can be done with any channel that has something connected to the input) is run an out either line or effects or both back into another channel. Example: Guitar channel one in, Channel one out into channel two input. etc, etc. Then maybe you can also pan 1 left and 2 right or just a little off center.<br><br>If tweaked you can have each channel sound slightly different and end up making it sound like more than one guitar playing. Which will sound pretty interesting. This can be done with vocals, keyboards, drums, etc. Anyway have fun experimenting.<br><br>Joe]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/">In The Studio</category>                        <dc:creator>forrok_star</dc:creator>
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				                    <item>
                        <title>Hey guys, tons of new stuff</title>
                        <link>https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/hey-guys-tons-of-new-stuff/#post-15509</link>
                        <pubDate>Wed, 15 Feb 2006 05:43:45 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Hey guys, a ton has happened to me since ive last been involved in this forum.  I was asked to leave my classical private Christian school because my grades were slipping and i was a bit of ...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Hey guys, a ton has happened to me since ive last been involved in this forum.  I was asked to leave my classical private Christian school because my grades were slipping and i was a bit of a rebel, nothing too bad though.  But anyways im doing this thing called running start now where i get high school credit and college credit by going to classes at my local community college.  I plan to graduate at the end of this, my senior year, on time.  <br><br>But anyways because of that I got a job at a local food joint in December to get some money up before i had to start at the community college (i had about 2 months before the next quarter).  I did that for about a month and I also got a job at Starbucks about halfway through December.  I quit the other job and now only work at starbucks.  Anyways I raised a good amount of funds and I spent a good deal of it on a bunch of cool new stuff.  I got a 15" speaker (Peavy PR15) and a 12 channel mixer (the Peavy PV14).  I also got a Nady XA-900 power amp, about 675 watt bridged mono (i only have one speaker so its more than enough).  Its all pretty dang sweet.  This was mostly so that we could expand later, and so that we could hear the singer at band practice.  He just needed some practice playing with live musicians.  I also made a last minute impluse buy to get this CAD Pro-7 seven piece drum mic set.  I do not regret it one bit.  They make the drums sound sooo much better.  All this cost me about 930 bucks in the end.  Im getting some money from the guys in my band to help me out with it as well.  But anyways, im really excited about it.<br><br>Im still running all this into my USB interface.  I send the left out of the mixer to channel one on my Lexicon Omega, and the right out to channel 2 on it.  <br><br>What i really want to know is how I can get the best sound out of all this equipment.  I have these headphones that i use to get the general mix down, but i get leakage from the instruments when im setting levels.  So its not totally accurate.  It sounds different recorded than it does live.  Im just wondering should i think about getting like a snake and run the mixer into a different room for level setting, should i just use trial and error, or should i get some like noise isolating headphones?<br><br>Also im not a big fan of committment.  I would kinda like to isloate the guitar and bass from the drums, but id still like to send them through the main mixer.  Would the outputs you use for the effects be good for that?  Theres one on each channel.  Or also when we record drums seperate from the guitar and bass id like to send the kick seperately so i can add more if i feel its needed.  What would be the best way to go about doing that?  I definately have GAS as far as recording equipment goes.  I dont really want guitar stuff right now, its crazy.  But i cant stop looking at new recording stuff.  <br><br>Anyways, cool.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://guitarnoise.forum/in-the-studio-in-the-studio/">In The Studio</category>                        <dc:creator>TaylorR</dc:creator>
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