UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Basic acoustic recording - tips and questions
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Hi all
Been dreaming up a bit of an acoustic project to get my writing, arranging and singing skills improving a bit more. Basically to do some originals and some covers in minimal arrangements with guitar, piano, voice with little by way of fancy effects, to try and build up my songcraft and singing ability. I "played" for an online creative festival thing earlier in the summer and whilst I was quite happy with the recordings I felt there was room for improvement and for learning
What I'd like to ask, is how to approach recording my acoustic. I did the two above "live" ie singing and playing at the same time into the interface, but I did do some mixing and effects in the DAW of course.
Current set up - It's a Big Baby Taylor so has no pickup, I can't upgrade the guitar but to be honest I think it's an adequate instrument. For the above I used a Seymour Duncan Woody single coil pickup, I think it was basically straight into my interface into Cubase. I added some eq and reverb, but there is an annoying hiss with this pickup that it's really hard to reduce with EQ without altering the sound. If you listen to the above you'll probably still make it out when just the guitar is playing without me whining over the top of it.
So question 1 - would replacing the Woody with a humbucker version of the Woody do the job? Any other similarly cheap pickups worth a look?
When I did a little EP type project before, I tried recording through the woody and a mic simultaneously to then blend the two together into a nicer sound. Except it didn't really work that well and and I kept whacking the mic whilst playing. Also I seem to sway a bit whilst playing so the volume on the mic was a bit up and down.
So question number 2 - is there a a better (but similarly cheap) option to approach this? Should I be looking at acoustic IRs to make it sound more like my guitar than like a sort-of acoustic sound through a pickup?
And question number 3 - If you have any criticisms of the above recordings that would improve the sound next time I try and do stuff, please do share. I don't get offended
I think a bit more bass on the acoustic might be needed but you tell me - I've heard it too many times now and have gone a bit deaf to it all
Thank you in advance!
Matt
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If you want better, get a decent budget Rode/ Aston/SE electronics condensor or an Audix i5 and stick at around the 15th fret pointing at the soundhole and sit your arse down, the greats can manage so you can too
If you are moving and really can't use a mic then get a Fishman rare earth blend, but £££
To be honest though I was quite happy with how the above recordings sounded*, except for the hiss. I was hoping the humbucker version would give essentially the same sound without noise, then whether there was any benefit to whether adding an IR either to it directly or in parallel might just give a touch more niceness to it.
It's a pretty basic guitar so I'm not really looking to put too much lipstick on the pig! Especially with my playing ability
*Edit, does that make me cloth eared and there's no hope for me?
You can also try a compressor on the mic signal to remove some of the volume difference.
I favour SDC's on acoustic guitar- point it at the 12th fret.
I generally do not like DI'ed acoustic guitars for recording.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
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It could well be the low level that is making the hiss worse, but it's definitely something to do with the pickup because when I did a load of recording before, I was getting all kinds of awful hissing and interference sounds because of the laptop screen/powersupply which I had to re-position myself for loads of times to reduce it and even then, the eq I had to do on it to get rid of the sound made it sound like I was playing acoustic with a guitar made out of a baked bean tin.
I will try the Woody I have with my electric modelling unit (Digitech GSP) either on direct mode or with the acoustic sim thing in case that helps as a sort of better preamp for it, then perhaps look to add a cheap mic like the one linked above to blend those two together if the GSP can keep the noise down a bit (there is a gate on it and a lot of eq options so fingers crossed).
I'd forgotten about the GSP until you just mentioned the levels, seems like might be a good idea.
It's an M Audio Fast Track, which Google suggests has a "Balanced 1/4" TRS line/instrument input" I think, the manual says this:
Guitar Input
max input level +12dBV, min. gain
signal to noise ratio -103dB, A-weighted, min. gain
dynamic range 103dB, A-weighted, min. gain
THD + N 0.005% (-86 dB) @ 1kHz, -1dBFS, min. gain
frequency response 20Hz to 20kHz, -0.2 / +0.1dB, min. gain
gain range 40 dB
input impedance 1M Ohms
crosstalk < -105dB, 1kHz, channel-to-channel
It means nothing to me, ahhh Vienna
Zoom handheld recorder. Twin directional mic's record in stereo. Zoom settings are a bit tricky to fathom but it's worth the effort especially the change from .mp3 to .wav format. Bigger bite sampling. Bigger files so less good for emailing but better for quality when making CD's. Zoom records onto SD card. SD goes into desktop. Then use freeware (Audacity) to edit raw files (fade in, fade out, little bit of reverb). Then I create CD on Windows 10 software and burn (usually 30) discs.
Finally I buy some sticky overprintable CD labels and CD cases off Amazon and have great fun producing artwork and final 'pruduct'. It's just like being back at school!!
Not sure many people listen to them subsequently but I enjoy it! More seriously, these CD's document my musical journey and help maintain my momentum for playing.
Hope that helps. Depends what you want to achieve but, yet again, music doesn't require megadosh! ☺
I was considering getting a cheap condenser at some point but that setup would also require me to buy a new interface as currently the most inputs I have on an interface is two - it has one XLR and one Jack - so I wouldn't be able to record the guitar and my singing at the same time. Ideally two XLR and a jack would be the best so I could record voice, mic'd Acoustic and pickup Acoustic. Whereas with something external like the Zoom I could sing into the interface and mic the Acoustic through the Zoom for inputting into Cubase afterwards I suppose.
I had assumed that hand held recorders mics were just a demoing tool and that the mics weren't up to much - was I wrong with that assumption?
All I can say is Zoom gives surprisingly good digital quality on my 'freebie' .wav/Audacity/Windows/CD setup.
Something's working right somewhere anyway!
Have fun colourbox.
With regards to moving position to the mic while recording, that is more about technique than gear. In the same way a decent singer has to learn how to move in and out on the mic, a recording acoustic player has to learn how to remain focused on mic placement.
It is a matter of taste but, the natural sound of your guitar will always give a wider harmonic range than the pick up and will better articulate your picking style.
If recording normal stuff, ie not meant to be like a live performance, then obviously one mic plus pickup is fine into my current interface and then I record the vocals separately. I suppose I need to think about how often I have to sing and play at the same time. I do feel my playing is better that way though, more expressive and I can play about with the timing a lot more as the two are moving together
But then there's the thing that the guitar mic would pick up my singing a little bit as well right?
Oh christ
Sometimes the gear is what we hide behind, unfortunately most people find it's not a good policy only after spending many hundreds of pounds.
The best investment/return is often in duvets and soft furnishings. I would suggest concentrating on finding a nice sounding space to record in, then learn to love your sound.
P.S. your SoundCloud recordings sound fine. There are some rough edges that will rub off with knowledge and experience but that can't be bought on Amazon.
Good work.
I don't have a nice space unfortunately, I live in a small house that is very limited with space, the above were recorded in about a square metre of space in the bedroom, with cables running to the laptop which was out on the landing so as to avoid more horrible noise from the pickup.
I've no intention of spending a fortune on this, I think having written down the various setup options, that the best course of action will be:
Purchase a cheap but OK condensor - seems to be possible with about £40-50 limit.
Maybe purchase one of those vocal mic shield things, probably a cheap one off Amazon unless I can get one second hand on ebay.
For any recordings where I need to sound "live" ie both playing and singing the same time, my existing setup above was adequate for my quality level. I still need to test the guitar with my modelling unit, to see if it can give a better signal and maybe use the noise gate to get rid of the horrible high pitched noise from the pickup.
For any more thorough recording tasks that don't need to be live, use the condenser to record the guitar but double up with the pickup and mix the two together. Then record singing separately also via the condenser.
I think that seems logical
I got an MXL770 originally to get clearer/brighter vocals than the mics I was using, and recently have started using that as a 'room' mic near the 12th fret, and combining that with the output from the pickup in my guitar (Fishman Matrix blend, set to the half-way position.
You can point one at the bridge, one at the 12th fret, don't point them at the soundhole
Personally I think 2 mics always give more options during mixing, and adds some 3D to the sound
Use whatever mic you have, if only one, point at the 12th fret
Wear a headset to hear the mics while you record, so that you adapt your position to get the best results