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I finally took my new 16tr digital recorder out of my basement studio and used it in a live setting.
The 1608 will only record 8 tracks simultaneously so I split it up like this..
1 - rhythm guitar (miked with a 57) 2 - bass (direct) 3 - scratch lead vocal (took a split off of bands mixer) 4 - OH drums (a 57 near the drummers right shoulder, pointed at the snare) 5&6 - Stereo X about 18 inches away and 18 inches up from floor at front of drum kit (2 EV RE20's) 7&8 - Lead guitar stereo (direct)
What's great about the 1608 is that you can have a preset that has a some compression and EQ on all 8 inputs when you do 8 channel recording and each channel can be customized for it's specific application.
The band was recorded live in their warehouse/rehearsal space. Not at a club.
Everything sounds great, even the drums. I'm from the school of using as few mics on the drum kit as possible. Close miking is just so 80's sounding to me. I like the way that Bonham sounded in the studio. No close miking. The important thing to do is make sure that all the drum mikes are equidistant from the snare, regardless of which way the mic is pointed. That way, the snare sounds nice and crisp and you won't get any phase problems.
We tracked 5 songs, and on 4 of them we did a second take in about 3 hours. The 1608 is really handy for this kind of application.
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