Your process?
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PurpleHaze
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Your process?
i been wanting to ask this i have my formula but i want ot know what you guys do. Here it goes, after you make a beat you want an artist to record on, what do you do? do you mixdown the beat first then let the artist record or you just record without it being rendered to one track and then you do the vocals and the instruments at the same time?
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funky shit
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if the vocalist is there with you recording the vocals I don't really see the need to bounce it down first unless you're trying to save on CPU or something.
I would just record them in. Unless you're working with someone remote (i do) then i bounce it down and send it to them so they can send vocals back for me to import.
I would just record them in. Unless you're working with someone remote (i do) then i bounce it down and send it to them so they can send vocals back for me to import.
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PurpleHaze
- Posts: 134
- Joined: Tue May 15, 2007 5:50 pm
Khazul wrote:This for hiphop type stuff?
If so - hit the close button and answer NO when it asks you to save
and if its housey-trance...
get some crackers and put reverb on the master outputs
and save that shit -----> and put it on myspace to join the cool kids.
and dont forget the highpass filter on the kick.
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RhythmSickness
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I tend to mostly work with remote vocalists, and do what tempus3r does, bounce it to send to them and then get stems back from them to work with. It does depend on the track though. Often it can be easier to just work with a flattened audio and just focus on the vocal trackstempus3r wrote:if the vocalist is there with you recording the vocals I don't really see the need to bounce it down first unless you're trying to save on CPU or something.
I would just record them in. Unless you're working with someone remote (i do) then i bounce it down and send it to them so they can send vocals back for me to import.
G5, G4x2 / G3 Live 3/4/5/6 Reason 2/2.5/3 virb soundclick
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PurpleHaze
- Posts: 134
- Joined: Tue May 15, 2007 5:50 pm
so you do your vocals in live or some other DAW?RhythmSickness wrote:I tend to mostly work with remote vocalists, and do what tempus3r does, bounce it to send to them and then get stems back from them to work with. It does depend on the track though. Often it can be easier to just work with a flattened audio and just focus on the vocal trackstempus3r wrote:if the vocalist is there with you recording the vocals I don't really see the need to bounce it down first unless you're trying to save on CPU or something.
I would just record them in. Unless you're working with someone remote (i do) then i bounce it down and send it to them so they can send vocals back for me to import.
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RhythmSickness
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Ah well it depends on the vocalist. Some of them use GarageBand to record. It really doesnt matter to me though as I just work with stems of audio that they provide. I tend to do all my sequencing in live where it involves working with stems.PurpleHaze wrote: so you do your vocals in live or some other DAW?
G5, G4x2 / G3 Live 3/4/5/6 Reason 2/2.5/3 virb soundclick
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PurpleHaze
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RhythmSickness
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yeah thats basically what stems are, individual tracks or takes rendered out. They typically include silence to fill out the length of the track
G5, G4x2 / G3 Live 3/4/5/6 Reason 2/2.5/3 virb soundclick
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RhythmSickness
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I first herd the term when dealing with post work in a film score environment.beats me wrote:Can somebody give me the exact date when the term "isolated tracks" became "stems"? I've been seeing the term stems pop up all over the place now and it's kind of getting on my nerves. Sounds like a hippy term that people use to sound cool. Maybe I need to grow the fuck up and evolve.
You might have several "Stems" premixed and sent out of the main mix so the sound to video editor will have some thing to work with,,
another application of the term is if you have a to record a larger ensemble next to a more traditional four piece but it's not convenient for all parties to be recorded at the same time,, so,, you would record the smaller arrangement and then use it as a guide while you record the larger section onto a multi track,, then this multi track would become a new stem group in the original arrangement.
To me the term stem indicates it's a simplified grouping of a more complex arrangement,, wether it's bounced or not is dependent of the situation that requires it.
15" 2.4 MBP/Live/Sampler/Operator/ Home made Dumble clone/Two Strats/One Jazz Bass.
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