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#1
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Hey all:
Thanks for the great advice about purchasing some items to record my son's middle school's orchestra, choir, and band. Your suggestions helped me re-think my initial ideas on gear which would have been acceptable but not nearly sound as good in the long run for these specific uses. I'm now looking at a pair of small-diaphragm condensor mics and most likely a simple stereo recording device, and maybe a nice preamp if the budget allows. Going this morning to talk with the choir, orch and band teachers as to their options. Carlos |
#2
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"Carlos Alden" wrote in message
Hey all: Thanks for the great advice about purchasing some items to record my son's middle school's orchestra, choir, and band. Your suggestions helped me re-think my initial ideas on gear which would have been acceptable but not nearly sound as good in the long run for these specific uses. I'm now looking at a pair of small-diaphragm condenser mics and most likely a simple stereo recording device, and maybe a nice preamp if the budget allows. Going this morning to talk with the choir, orch and band teachers as to their options. As I recall, your budget was limited to say the least. If you're recording a school band, portability of sorts might be a good feature. Here's a possible setup: (1) Creative Labs Nomad Jukebox 3 (NJB3) - check eBay new items recently closed refurb or new for around $200. This is a surprisingly well-featured portable 16/44 digital player/recorder with line inputs, flat response and low noise. Battery and/or line voltage power. 20 GB internal space. (2) Behringer MXB 1002 mixer - at just about any online music store for about $100. Battery and/or line voltage power. (3) Pair of MXL 603 wide pattern small-diaphragm cardioid mics - about $200 a pair new at various online stores, or eBay stores. You should be able to get the matched pair with shock mounts. (4) Pair of Behringer ECM 8000 omnidirectional mics - about $100 a pair new at various online stores. (5) Misc wires and cables - $100 allowance. (6) Upload your recorded stereo tracks from the NJB3 to a PC running Audacity (freeware) for editing, etc. Burn CDs for distribution from the PC using its burner or if none is available pick up a Liteon CD burner from various online stores for under $40 with Nero software. (7) For an worthwhile custom flourish, budget about $80 for a Casio CD/DVD labeler that adds onto your PC's USB port. I've found that burned CDs with handwritten labels just don't have the end-user appeal of a CD with a permanent printed-on label. You don't even need a cover sheet for your CD cases, but a back sheet with a neatly-formatted track list also adds to their appeal. Get some experience using this stuff - at least a month including record some rehearsals and test shows, and you might be ready to distribute some pretty fair-sounding product. |
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