TWarp
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Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
Hello, Can anybody help me in finding a way to record the vocal and acoustic guitar at the same time without bleeding both tracks into each other? Thanks, TWarp
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Beagle
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:02:04
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we'll need more information - what soundcard are you using? what inputs are you selecting on your audio tracks?
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ScottBenson
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:03:37
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Is the singer the same person playing the guitar? If you have two performers, put the singer in one room and the guitar player in another and use head phones so they can hear each other. If it's one person playing both parts it will be fairly difficult to record both tracks without any bleed.
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giankap
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:15:51
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If it's one person playing both parts it will be fairly difficult to record both tracks without any bleed. fairly difficult? I'd say impossible unless it's an electric guitar directly to the audio interface input and the mic is a dynamic one.
sincerely, Ioannis Windows - some Dual Core CPU - a little bit of RAM - not so bad soundcard - i think it's called Sonar - a silver mixer with colorful knobs - black speaker monitors - my ears some work
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Middleman
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:28:25
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Two Cardiod mics pointing away from each other will give you nice isolation. You will never get total isolation however unless you use either a foam block or record one at a time.
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bitman
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:34:08
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You will need a pair of figure 8 polar pattern mics. There is a null point in a figure 8 mic. You arrange them in such a way so the guitar mic null is pointing at the voice and the vocal mic null is pointing at the guitar. Two two types of mic capable of fig 8 polar pattern are dual diaphragm condensers and ribbon mics Ribbon mics have a deeper null than condensers. If I am correct the null is 40db for condensers and 60db for ribbons. You can get usable isolation this way.
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ScottBenson
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:48:18
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giankap If it's one person playing both parts it will be fairly difficult to record both tracks without any bleed. fairly difficult? I'd say impossible unless it's an electric guitar directly to the audio interface input and the mic is a dynamic one. I was going to say impossible, but then I reminded myself that exact terminology can be taken very seriously in this forum so I went with "fairly difficult" so that I wouldn't have to spend the next week defending "impossible". ;)
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Middleman
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 22:51:00
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Scott, I totally get that. One small slip around here and the thread goes south.
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TWarp
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:06:46
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Hey Middleman, What do you mean by a foam block? The reason I'm asking is that I tried doing them seperately but the timing just wasn't there if you know what I mean. I would like to play and sing together. Each one plays to the other. Thanks, TWarp
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TWarp
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:10:58
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Hey bitman, Thanks for the reply. I believe that both of my mics are 8 polar pattern. Can you elaborate a little more on the procedure? How do I know the null point? Thanks TWarp
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Bub
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:18:29
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What I do is, I record my with headphones on and use my electric. Then I go back and record my acoustic part, with headphones on, so I can use multiple mic's on my acoustic without fear of bleed over from my vocals. It's rare you get a good take anyway on the first shot so you'll probably have to go back and redo the guitar anyway, and the vocals too so it's no big deal to do it this way.
"I pulled the head off Elvis, filled Fred up to his pelvis, yaba daba do, the King is gone, and so are you."
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Middleman
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:23:36
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Homemade foam pad about 3 inches thick 2x3 feet can be hung from the vocal mic stand and then rests on the guitar. It blocks the voice from the guitar. I read that Tony Visconti used one for James Taylors hourglass album. I built my own. It works, you get decent isolation unless you have a very live room. Doesn't work for Pete Townsend arm swinging types but for general strumming and picking on an acoustic, it's usable. Kind of what Bub suggests, you can just record both at the same time and don't worry about the bleed. Then come back and double both the vocal then the guitar separately using the original track for timing. Then just throw away the original. Worse that can occur is some headphone bleed.
post edited by Middleman - 2011/02/10 23:27:43
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TWarp
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:29:24
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Middleman, Sounds like a plan. I have access to such a pad. Thanks for the input. TWarp
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TWarp
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:29:25
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Middleman, Sounds like a plan. I have access to such a pad. Thanks for the input. TWarp
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TWarp
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:31:34
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Bub, Good thinking, I can play the guitar without the vocal but not the vocal without the guitar. Good thought. Thanks, TWarp
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M@ B
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/10 23:59:29
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this is a nice demonstration of the two figure of 8 mic technique which i believe bitman was referring to. although many home recordists (like me) don't have two figure of 8 mics. ...still good to know and understand. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QWNXzp5P6g
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cecelius2
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/11 01:43:39
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M@ B this is a nice demonstration of the two figure of 8 mic technique which i believe bitman was referring to. although many home recordists (like me) don't have two figure of 8 mics. ...still good to know and understand. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QWNXzp5P6g This video you linked is indeed nice. Thanks Cecelius2
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M@ B
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/11 10:24:51
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brundlefly
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/11 10:45:37
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kevo
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/11 10:50:03
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brundlefly Please post video of this being used in your studio. Thanks!
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Beagle
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Re:Record Acoustic Guitar and vocal @ the same time
2011/02/11 10:51:23
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my bad. I misunderstood the question. I would use the figure 8 mic technique described above if it were me.
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