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Recording the Bass


Spoombung
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Just wondering how you guys do it?

I've found mic-ing up the cab sounds 'rounder' but unfortunately a bit noisier (hiss & hum) but it's a big faff to do at home - and you have to have a good mic.

DI-ing is easier (you just plug it in) but on close listening it can sound dry, quacky, sterile and thin in the mids.

Any thoughts?

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I too have done a lot of recording & always used the DI option dating back 20yrs when I didn't really know much but all the various engineers preferred it. I was listening to some 15yr old demos last night & thinking just how good my bass sounded.

Edited by BurritoBass
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It really depends on the mic-amp combination. I'll usually record the amp, but unless I've found a sound I really like I'll also take a DI and re-amp it later. Bass amps get noisy, but most of that will disappear in the mix anyway, and crystal-clear mixes are just f*cking boring if you ask me.

Re-amping seems to be one of those things that's gone by the board along with lots of other old studio techniques people used to swear by. Like taking the time to mic things properly.

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[quote name='maxrossell' post='699354' date='Jan 3 2010, 11:46 AM']It really depends on the mic-amp combination. I'll usually record the amp, but unless I've found a sound I really like I'll also take a DI and re-amp it later. Bass amps get noisy, but most of that will disappear in the mix anyway, and crystal-clear mixes are just f*cking boring if you ask me.

Re-amping seems to be one of those things that's gone by the board along with lots of other old studio techniques people used to swear by. Like taking the time to mic things properly.[/quote]

+1

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[quote name='maxrossell' post='699354' date='Jan 3 2010, 11:46 AM']It really depends on the mic-amp combination. I'll usually record the amp, but unless I've found a sound I really like I'll also take a DI and re-amp it later. Bass amps get noisy, but most of that will disappear in the mix anyway, and crystal-clear mixes are just f*cking boring if you ask me.

[b]Re-amping seems to be one of those things that's gone by the board along with lots of other old studio techniques people used to swear by[/b]. Like taking the time to mic things properly.[/quote]

Good point!

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[quote name='maxrossell' post='699354' date='Jan 3 2010, 11:46 AM']Re-amping seems to be one of those things that's gone by the board along with lots of other old studio techniques people used to swear by. Like taking the time to mic things properly.[/quote]

Never heard of 're-amping' before...

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[quote name='Spoombung' post='699481' date='Jan 3 2010, 01:33 PM']Never heard of 're-amping' before...[/quote]

Record the bass clean through DI onto your recording medium, and then run an output from the recorded channel to the input of your chosen amp & record the signal off the amp onto another channel. It has numerous advantages - not least that you can keep trying it with different amps to get the sound you want.

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[quote name='leftybassman392' post='699487' date='Jan 3 2010, 01:39 PM']Record the bass clean through DI onto your recording medium, and then run an output from the recorded channel to the input of your chosen amp & record the signal off the amp onto another channel. It has numerous advantages - not least that you can keep trying it with different amps to get the sound you want.[/quote]

Spot on. It's a good little mixing trick, bearing in mind that you don't always want the musicians milling around when you're trying to find a good amp sound, but you have to have them around to actually cut the track, so the simplest thing is to get a dry signal on tape and put it back out of the desk into an amp later, when the musicians have all gone off to snort coke off a model's bare breasts or whatever.

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When recording or going through FOH I always DI from my amp and post EQ so the desk gets [i]my[/i] sound, such as it is! I've had quite a few arguments with engineers about this but, in the end, they usually agree the bass sounds good.

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I use a Behringer Bass V-Amp Pro. It has all the EQ compression and amp simulation you need, it also allows you to use one putput as a dry DI signal and the other output equalized with amp simulation so you can record both signal simultaneously and mix them as required.

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[quote name='Spoombung' post='699273' date='Jan 3 2010, 09:39 AM']Just wondering how you guys do it?

I've found mic-ing up the cab sounds 'rounder' but unfortunately a bit noisier (hiss & hum) but it's a big faff to do at home - and you have to have a good mic.

DI-ing is easier (you just plug it in) but on close listening it can sound dry, quacky, sterile and thin in the mids.

Any thoughts?[/quote]

i used a mic...got some air in the recording..ambience etc...it was a fender P with rw and came over just like an urb

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[quote name='leftybassman392' post='699487' date='Jan 3 2010, 01:39 PM']Record the bass clean through DI onto your recording medium, and then run an output from the recorded channel to the input of your chosen amp & record the signal off the amp onto another channel. It has numerous advantages - not least that you can keep trying it with different amps to get the sound you want.[/quote]



Please explain re-amping, it sounds like a great technique but sadly I have gotten lost in transalation.

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Depending on the players rig, I'll often take a DI from the bass, a DI from the amp's pre-amp output (a lot of amps have a DI output these days) and I'll mic the cab too, the variation that affords in the mix is well worth the effort.

I will always re-align the mic'ed track with the DI tracks, because it'll be slightly late and the phase change will rob you of some LF, just a case of dragging the mic audio forward by a few milliseconds in Protools.

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[quote name='funkygreega' post='699787' date='Jan 3 2010, 06:27 PM']Please explain re-amping, it sounds like a great technique but sadly I have gotten lost in transalation.[/quote]

Sorry for the delay:-

Basic procedure is as follows (many variations)...

[indent]Step 1: Connect your bass to a channel input of your recording equipment using D.I. with no effects (usually called 'clean' or 'dry' signal). Play the bass line as required for the song and record it. You now have a recording of the exact sound the bass is making.

Step 2: Connect the output of the recorded channel from the recording device to the input jack of your chosen bass amplifier. Connect the output of the amplifier to an unused channel (or channels) of the recording equipment. When you play back the recording the bass amplifier treats it as if it were you playing the bass live. If you decide you like the sound you simply rewind the recorder and record the sound onto the new channel. If not, change the amplifier settings and go again. If you still don't like it you can change the amplifier and repeat the process as often as you like.[/indent]


As I said above, this is a basic description. Part of the skill of a recording engineer is to use it creatively to obtain the required sound. There are some very good examples in some of the posts above.


I'm afraid that's as simple as I can put it. Hopefully it makes sense.

Edited by leftybassman392
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