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Gear / Technical Help => Ask The Tapers => Topic started by: Dan33185 on June 06, 2024, 12:57:55 AM
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I have a 2 part question, I'm hoping to get equipment that will fit both these needs if possible.
First off, my price range would be under $500
1. I know a local musician who performs covers, but has written some of her own songs she hasn't sang or recorded. I would like to offer the ability for her to record these as low-fi demos basically, and would like to know what all I would need to get the best results. It would be her vocals and guitar, so very minimal. I currently record her live through her SBD with my Tascam DR-60D and get decent results, but am wondering if there is anything that would get better results for demo recordings.
2. I would also like to use the above to record concerts as well, if that's realistic.
I'm wondering if my current equipment can have instruments plugged directly in to it (guitar and mic), or if I would need something more. Also, would I be better off recording her vocals and guitar through the soundboard, or with external mics set close to her?
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I have a 2 part question, I'm hoping to get equipment that will fit both these needs if possible.
First off, my price range would be under $500
1. I know a local musician who performs covers, but has written some of her own songs she hasn't sang or recorded. I would like to offer the ability for her to record these as low-fi demos basically, and would like to know what all I would need to get the best results. It would be her vocals and guitar, so very minimal. I currently record her live through her SBD with my Tascam DR-60D and get decent results, but am wondering if there is anything that would get better results for demo recordings.
2. I would also like to use the above to record concerts as well, if that's realistic.
I'm wondering if my current equipment can have instruments plugged directly in to it (guitar and mic), or if I would need something more. Also, would I be better off recording her vocals and guitar through the soundboard, or with external mics set close to her?
You will get some good opinions on this. My first one is the deck isn't as important in this scenario as the microphones. When you say, record her vocals and guitar through the soundboard, what microphones are you using A] for the vocals B] for the guitar (additionally-is the guitar going in through a DI box, thus no mic?)
My second point is generic- What I bolded in your last question is the crux of the biscuit. A question asked, and answered by many sound professionals with many different solutions.
My decision would be based on my first questions, what mics are you using? The deck hardly matters unless you need to go Four channel.
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If it's just guitar and vocals, and the guitar is going through a DI, you should be fine to record both direct into the DR60d (though you should test that theory.) If (and this is a big if) you can get direct outs from the board, that will be the least intrusive way to do it. If not, splitting from the sources is also an option, but you'd want to make sure that she makes sure the house crew is aware, because they won't love you running around their stage pulling/repatching cables.
The main downside I could see in the 60d is that it only has 2ch of preamps, so if there comes a time when there's more than just guitar/vocals, you won't have room for anything else
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"I would like to offer the ability for her to record these as low-fi demos.."
"I currently record her live through her SBD with my Tascam DR-60D and get decent results.."
^ The recordings you are making already can serve as demo recordings. Please describe what you and she desires/expects from a demo recording that differs from those recordings. Then our answers can hinge on the particular attributes you and she are looking for in the demo recordings.. accommodating the working process she feels confident with when making them. The gear used is the obvious and easiest thing for us to discuss (Rocksuitcase and opsopcopolis are spot on in their gear suggestions). But since the expectations for the type of demo are subjective, it will help to better nail down the qualities you and she are looking for.
Stuff like..
How important is the live performance aspect to her.. and to the intended audience of the demo?
Is live performance energy and audience interaction one of the more compelling aspects of her particular musical artistry?
^ If so, recording in a way that conveys those kinds of attributes will be important.
Doing that is quite different than the creation of a recording which is does not sound like its a live performance. Something like a "dry upfront and intimate sounding" recording that has close/intimate "in your ear" type vocal delivery and is of its "own little world" which excludes the sound of the environment in which it was made.
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You will get some good opinions on this. My first one is the deck isn't as important in this scenario as the microphones. When you say, record her vocals and guitar through the soundboard, what microphones are you using A] for the vocals B] for the guitar (additionally-is the guitar going in through a DI box, thus no mic?)
My second point is generic- What I bolded in your last question is the crux of the biscuit. A question asked, and answered by many sound professionals with many different solutions.
My decision would be based on my first questions, what mics are you using? The deck hardly matters unless you need to go Four channel.
I'm not sure of the mic she uses, it would most likely just be the same one she uses for shows. She runs her equipment through a Flamma FM10 (https://flammainnovation.com/single.html?id=58), and I plug in to the "output" on the top right in the image at the link.
If it's just guitar and vocals, and the guitar is going through a DI, you should be fine to record both direct into the DR60d (though you should test that theory.) If (and this is a big if) you can get direct outs from the board, that will be the least intrusive way to do it. If not, splitting from the sources is also an option, but you'd want to make sure that she makes sure the house crew is aware, because they won't love you running around their stage pulling/repatching cables.
The main downside I could see in the 60d is that it only has 2ch of preamps, so if there comes a time when there's more than just guitar/vocals, you won't have room for anything else
For demos and such, I would not being doing them at a venue, rather in a garage/music room, something isolated. It would be just her and her guitar, so for the moment I wouldn't need anything to complicated.
"I would like to offer the ability for her to record these as low-fi demos.."
"I currently record her live through her SBD with my Tascam DR-60D and get decent results.."
^ The recordings you are making already can serve as demo recordings. Please describe what you and she desires/expects from a demo recording that differs from those recordings. Then our answers can hinge on the particular attributes you and she are looking for in the demo recordings.. accommodating the working process she feels confident with when making them. The gear used is the obvious and easiest thing for us to discuss (Rocksuitcase and opsopcopolis are spot on in their gear suggestions). But since the expectations for the type of demo are subjective, it will help to better nail down the qualities you and she are looking for.
Stuff like..
How important is the live performance aspect to her.. and to the intended audience of the demo?
Is live performance energy and audience interaction one of the more compelling aspects of her particular musical artistry?
^ If so, recording in a way that conveys those kinds of attributes will be important.
Doing that is quite different than the creation of a recording which is does not sound like its a live performance. Something like a "dry upfront and intimate sounding" recording that has close/intimate "in your ear" type vocal delivery and is of its "own little world" which excludes the sound of the environment in which it was made.
We haven't discussed this yet, I will be seeing her next week and brining it up. I know studio time can be expensive, so I wanted to offer her at least something to lay down songs she's written at no expense to her. I'm sure she'd be satisfied with my current setup I use for her shows, but I figured if I can get even better sound, it would be worth at least investigating. My hope is if something like this goes good, I would love to start something like Western AF (https://www.youtube.com/c/WesternAF) for smaller, more local musicians, obviously on a smaller scale than what they do.
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My question is:
How does she sound singing and playing without amplification at all? A stereo pair a little in front of her, where it sounds good and is mostly direct instead of reflected sound, could make for a dandy demo.
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I've tried this exact same thing many times:
You're probably good starting out with your DR-60d. Use the first mic input for her vocal mic, then mic the acoustic guitar with a small-diaphragm condenser and plug that into the 2nd mic input. Last, if you can, take the 1/4 output of her acoustic guitar run that into her FM10 mixer and run an output out of the mixer into the 1/8 input on the DR-60d (tracks 3 and 4 I believe). You should have 3 independent tracks to insert into multitrack software to mix and master. (You might have to split the stereo file from input 1 and 2 so you have mono files of her vocals and acoustic guitar).
Do you have access to a large diaphragm condenser for her vocal mic? You can probably get a cheap one and it will be just be fine for a lowfi demo. I personally feel bright mics tend to sound better on female vocals (experts please weigh-in), so one of the cheap (and bright) entry level LDC's isn't the worst option. Something like an AT4040, you can probably find a used one.
It's also a common misconception that vocal recording requires a condensor, you can certainly try something like a Shure SM58 dynamic mic, a Shure SM7 (or whatever the popular podcast mic is) or even the vocal mic she uses for shows. Don't hesitate to use what you already have.
I usually don't like the sound of acoustic guitars when recording directly from the 1/4 output, especially cheap acoustic guitars. But that's why you put a mic on the guitar, then in post you can play around with the balance of the direct out + the small diaphragm mic and you can a decent full sound. If only using 1 mic on the guitar, I like to start out with it around 1-2 feet away, halfway in between her left and right hands. You can also try 1-2 ft away directly in front of the sound hole. If you don't have a small diaphragm condensor, it might be time to get a couple since you're a taper! :)
The best advice I can give when trying something like this is to SET EVERYTHING UP AND PRACTICE BEFORE YOU RECORD THE ARTIST. Nothing ruins a studio session quicker than the recording engineer not knowing the equipment etc and the artist has to sit there and watch you figure things out.
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"We haven't discussed this yet, I will be seeing her next week and brining it up. "
Start with that conversation.
If appropriate to the music and if she is good enough to come across well "fully acoustically" as one would hear her singing and playing without any amplification, then what grawk suggests is probably the way to go. Few mistakes to make, things to screw up, or processing to be done, and the possibility of capturing something excellent - simple, pure and delicious without the recording process getting in the way.
If she wants to convey the energy and feel of a live performance. Do that at one of her gigs with and audience of supportive friends. Set up your simple stereo pair of microphones beneath her vocal mic on the same stand. Great live recordings of solo singer/songwriter type performers have been made that way.
If she doesn't want a live feel, do it the same but without an audience, preferably somewhere with good reverberant acoustics. Be creative in finding and using those places like that.
If you have to, do it the same way in a walk in closet with lots of cloths hanging in there, or something similar to deaden the acoustics of a small room. That will sound very flat and dead and will need added reverb. A large room with good acoustics will sound much better and more natural, which is what makes that the better option.
Recording her the same way in in a typical untreated garage or room in your or her home can certainly work, but won't sound nearly as good as a decent sized space with good acoustics, and is likely to sound worse than recording in a very dead sounding closet like space with added reverb. The sound of a small room tends to clutter up this style of recording with too many early reflections and no good reverb. The resulting recording is going to need added reverb anyway and the not so good small room sound will remain.
The effort to find a decent sounding space will be worth it, and this simple recording method makes taking advantage of that kind of resource easy.
Recording in the way Chanher suggests is the way most folks are likely to think about going about it, but requires more setup, experimentation to get the mic setup right, mixing work, all that jazz. Quite different skill set than concert taper style recording. It can make for a produced-sounding recording, but will require more skill to pull off well. This sound might be her expectation, however I'd steer you toward what grawk suggests first if that can work for her. This method will take a lot more trial, error, learning and effort on your part, but can better support things like effects and compression if the music requires that kind of thing. It can also add some polish to a performer who can't pull off the simpler straight live to a stereo pair of mics thing as easily. Once you do figure out a reliable and good sounding systematic approach for recording vox and guitar in this way, you can then more easily adapt this method for other musicians who perform with a similar style.
If you want to offer this kind of service regularly, it will be beneficial to be able to use either of these approaches, choosing whichever best fits the performer and their music.
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Making a demo for a singer songwriter is a little different than making a performance recording - and how you go about it much depends on what you are trying to create. Even a modest demo might feature doubled (or more) vocals, harmonies, doubled guitars, different instrumentation, etc.
If the finished product is going to be a single vocal track and a single guitar track then you are set with your 60d. Do 3 or four takes, import them into your software and pick the best one.
If it was me I would use the mixer (I clicked the link and it looks like it has USB interface functionality) to act as the interface to a computer running a DAW. That way you can easily track, delete, retrack, over dub and anything else you need to do inside one project. It's also easier to monitor the results.
I created an entire album of my own music in my spare bedroom using Adobe Audition 1.5, a few mics and an interface. If I can do it anyone can.
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Yes, gutbucket is right, I easily forget how complicated and overwhelming multitrack software, and the mixing and mastering that come with it, can be.
If you are open to using a computer (and audio software) to mix and master a (semi) polished product, then I've used the method I listed above many times.
You can get more advanced and use a audio interface with computer, like goodcooker says you can (possibly) use her mixer as a usb interface.
If you just wanna keep it as simple as possible, you could just put a stereo pair (DIN comes to mind, or a general A-B) in front of the artist and let her do her thing. Maybe 1-3 feet out from her. I've done this plenty of times, and I usually needed to put the pair a little closer to the mouth, unless the artist really projects their vocals. Record a quick soundcheck, and have headphones nearby to do a quick listen, have her listen, and adjust the location accordingly.
I did this when friends just needed a demo for booking, something to give the booker(?) an idea. They rarely listen to the whole thing, it's not gonna be sold or scrutinized. You could technically do this with your H2. If you have a pair of SD condensors, then plug those into DR-60d. Little electret condensors (sound pro or church audio mics) will work, that's what I started out with.
edit: gut is also right about the room; make sure the room sounds ok. A bare garage is probably to echoey and boomy, and a tiny closet is too closed in. A medium sized well furnished room is fine in a pinch.
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Thanks for all the input everyone, I didn't even think to run a USB out to my laptop, that would be ideal as I can monitor it much easier. As far as the room recording would take place in, your tips have definitely been helpful, a garage type setting may be too empty and cause too much echo, so a family room type setting may be better. She added a show to her schedule tomorrow, so I'll be talking to her about all this tomorrow and hopefully can figure out something that she's comfortable with.
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I've been following this thread. I think most of the ideas offered are solid, with some being mor or less complciated.
What I'd like to add to the thread is a simple thank you and attaboy for taking an interest in local musicans and helping them along. From what I see these days of no music labels offering production money (or MUCH less ) is independent musicians having a much tougher time gaining "reach". Even with social media it is still a rough slog to get recognized.
So, thanks from this old taper for what you are doing. 8)
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I've been following this thread. I think most of the ideas offered are solid, with some being mor or less complciated.
What I'd like to add to the thread is a simple thank you and attaboy for taking an interest in local musicans and helping them along. From what I see these days of no music labels offering production money (or MUCH less ) is independent musicians having a much tougher time gaining "reach". Even with social media it is still a rough slog to get recognized.
So, thanks from this old taper for what you are doing. 8)
I've never played an instrument and probably won't, so I try to contribute to music in the ways I can. In my dream world, I'd love to win the lottery and open my own studio that local musicians can record at a cost that basically pays for electricity to run the place. Lots of great music out there waiting to be heard, so even just offering something like I'm trying to do, I'm thrilled to be able to do it. I did talk to her today and she was really surprised anyone cared enough to ask and was enthusiastic about it, so that was a great feeling.
If it was me I would use the mixer (I clicked the link and it looks like it has USB interface functionality) to act as the interface to a computer running a DAW. That way you can easily track, delete, retrack, over dub and anything else you need to do inside one project. It's also easier to monitor the results.
This sounds ideal to me...it looks like it uses a USB Type-C from looking at YouTube videos, should I just be able to use any Type-C cable > my laptop, or are there specific types for audio? I think what I would like to do it is plug her mic and guitar into the FM10 and run the USB out to my laptop and record that with with Audacity, and also have a pair of mics in front of her running to the DR-60D, and work with combining them in post to get the best results.
One thing I'm noticing as I'm listening back to live recordings of her is the guitar. There's almost like a vibration or something when she hits certain chords...is there any way to dampen that?
https://ia600205.us.archive.org/11/items/josie-sanken-2024-02-17-powder-ridge-kimball-mn-sbd/34.%20Wagon%20Wheel.mp3
EDIT (6/9/24)- So after doing a little more research, I came across a Tascam DR-70D for 135 bucks used. That has 4 XLR inputs, which would take a lot of the extra work out for me I think. Basically run the 1/2 from her mixer as I do now, plus add 2 external mics through the 3/4 inputs for her guitar + room ambiance. This way as soon as I hit record it's recording all 4 channels instead of having to line them up in post with 2 separate sources, and I can still play with levels as needed. Now, the only thing to decide is the correct mics. I still think the Behringer C-2's would work for this purpose and also for recording shows. Are those decent mics for the price (59 bucks for the pair), or does anyone have recommendations for any under the ~150 buck range?
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Good thread. I started to reply early on but got distracted and came back after the weekend to find an awful lot has been said that I might have offered.
But, to the pertinent question of the Behringer c-2s... I haven't used them and can't recommend them but I do use inexpensive Chinese mics for most of my work both as a taper and a home recordist of music.
I think the biggest thing that has been said here is that you should agree what constitutes a demo.
A demo can be a reference used for future recording. It can also be intended as a slightly more slick product for promotion.
As someone who produces his own music at home, when I demo a song, it's rarely more than a single mic, placed to capture voice & acoustic guitar.
But some artists who work in professional studios would call my finished product a home demo despite the multitracking and other efforts.
So understanding her intent for the recording is important.
All that said, listening to this sbd sample I think if you can capture something like that in two channels from the mixer and add a mic on the guitar, a little reverb on the vocals in post and you're probably in business.
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https://ia600205.us.archive.org/11/items/josie-sanken-2024-02-17-powder-ridge-kimball-mn-sbd/34.%20Wagon%20Wheel.mp3
Listening through the tiny mono built-in computer speaker I can't decern a lot about the recording but can hear her performance / playing style, which is strong and sufficiently self-balanced to be able to come across well in a relatively simple single take recording.
In a large good sounding space a single stereo pair two or three feet away should do nicely. Don't bother to mic the room unless its large enough and good sounding - and even then doing so is really more of a safety to be able to add more room-verb if needed. A typical living room is unlikely to be large enough to be beneficially reverberant and will probably just sound boxy - you needn't mic the room at all in that case, just record dry and add artificial reverb. If you want to get fancy you might use a close vocal mic and two mics on the guitar rather than using a single stereo pair for both, which can provide just enough separation to let you alter the reverb somewhat between vox and guitar, allow for the different application of compression if desired, and achieve a little more stereo interest from the guitar by way of how it's mic'd rather than via the room acoustics.
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This highlights what I see to be the fundamental difference in approach between a taper recording and a home-demo recording. The essence of a live-concert taper recording is a live performance held in a performance space with an audience present, which might be reinforced by close mics to add clarity, intimacy, detail and proximity where needed. A home demo type recording is the opposite in starting with a dry, up close sounding recording that has loads of detailed clarity, to which a sense of reverberant space is added.
Recording her in a good acoustic space using a stereo pair is a taper style methodology. You setup to catch a solo live performance in a room without an audience present. Other than accessing an appropriate space in which to make the recording (therein lies the rub), there is likely to be less burden on both of you when doing it that way. Recording the other way requires more setup-tweaking of close mics and the creation of an artificial space for that up-close recording to live and breath in using reverb. Both work. Different approach, different skills.
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I guess "demo" was the wrong choice of words. What it would be is recording songs that may or may not be used for release down the road depending on how comfortable she is with how they turn out, and how comfortable she is putting her own work out there for the public. Much different performing covers than your own stuff. But, like I told her, I believe her original stuff deserves a chance to be recorded at least, even if it's just to share among family and friends, and if she decides to do a small CD pressing later, great. I had forgotten that she has a "she-shed" type building, which is maybe 15x15 that works as her art studio/guest room if family is over, so that should be a perfect setting for this type of recording.
I do use inexpensive Chinese mics for most of my work both as a taper and a home recordist of music.
Which mics are they out of curiosity? Are you content with the results they produce?
EDIT- Anyone have opinions on the Teac ME120's? I see a pair for 100 bucks in YS.
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Do some homework on studio vs live recording techniques. Unless a live feel without the crowd is what she's after anything that is intended for release is going to stick out like a sore thumb if recorded with distant mic techniques.
You can make it work in a less than perfect space by hanging some heavy blankets (I used to use comforters and quilts from the thrift store hung over rolling clothes racks) to isolate the vocal and guitar from room reflections. Also helps if there's some furniture to break up the room.
There's loads of Youtube videos with some great tips for doing what you describe on a shoestring budget. Also some great tutorials about how to record vocals and plug in chains to get the most out of what you capture.
I would ask her to give you a couple of reference tunes to hear what she wants it to sound like which can narrow down what you need to do to produce what she's after.
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Do some homework on studio vs live recording techniques. Unless a live feel without the crowd is what she's after anything that is intended for release is going to stick out like a sore thumb if recorded with distant mic techniques.
You can make it work in a less than perfect space by hanging some heavy blankets (I used to use comforters and quilts from the thrift store hung over rolling clothes racks) to isolate the vocal and guitar from room reflections. Also helps if there's some furniture to break up the room.
There's loads of Youtube videos with some great tips for doing what you describe on a shoestring budget. Also some great tutorials about how to record vocals and plug in chains to get the most out of what you capture.
I would ask her to give you a couple of reference tunes to hear what she wants it to sound like which can narrow down what you need to do to produce what she's after.
Just a straight studio feel is what she's going for...so by distant mic technique do you mean an ambient room mic? Just do away with that idea? But a mic closer to her guitar for a better sound than through her mixer should be ok? Or would using my Zoom serve the same purpose (and qualty) as that mic?
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By distant mic I mean more than 1 foot away from the source.
There's a lot of ways to skin a cat. Give it a whirl with what you have to work with. Maybe ask some local tapers or musicians if you can borrow a couple of small diaphragm condenser mics and/or an LDC see what you can come up with.
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One more question...the mics I bought come with 3 caps (Omni, Cardioid & Super Cardioid), I am assuming I would want to use Super Cardioid for this type of recording?
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If you're close-mic'ing guitar, in a zero audience situation, just use cardiod.
I do use inexpensive Chinese mics for most of my work both as a taper and a home recordist of music.
Which mics are they out of curiosity? Are you content with the results they produce?
I'm talking Studio Projects CP-1 ldc, Superlux pencil mics with multiple caps (though, for home studio stuff, it's all with the card caps), and a Cascade Fathead ribbon. I do have a Shure SM-7 that I use primarily for vocals and a couple SM57s for hammering nails.
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Assuming close mic'ing, the differing degree of proximity effect you'll get from different pattern capsules is going to be a significant aspect of the sound with both voice and guitar. You will do well to take time to try them all, listen, decide. A lot will depend on the sound of the voice and the sound of the guitar.
Be aware that its sort of the opposite of the taper experience of recording from distances where proximity effect doesn't apply so omnis tends to emphasize the low frequency content and directional mics tend to sound less warm. An omni placed close to the source has no proximity effect and will produce less low frequency emphasis than a directional mic used close to the source. The tighter the pattern the more low frequency thickening from proximity up close. Slight changes of position and mic'ing distance can make a significant difference in sound.
A lot of the "up close and produced" sound of an intimate sounding type demo recording is often due to proximity effect richness.
Tight patterns can make staying in position on mic a bit more difficult for some folks though.
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I have had good success with blending a mix of a stereo pair close to a band and blending in the vocals from the FOH mix. I do a post production mix.
My current favorite mic is an R88 stereo ribbon setup in front of the band. This gives me a good image especially with the drum kit and then reflections of the space. The mic picks up stereo from both the front and back.
I augment the recording with direct vocals from the board and just blend that in enough to give good articulation of the vocals. Recording from a distance the vocals can lose a lot of definition and mixing in some from the board makes a significant difference. The board feed can be mono as I just need the vocal up the middle.
Spaced omnis are often used in classical recording. This works nicely for stereo because usually these are very nicely designed halls for that purpose. The choice of mic depends upon the sound of the venue. If it's not a good sounding space I would go with cardiods placed closer.
If you are recording the same singer/songwriter it may take a few tries to dial in the perfect sound. Experiment and fine-tune the process until you get exactly what you are looking for.
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So this is probably a dumb question, and I'm pretty sure I already know the answer unfortunately. If I am plugging in a vocal mic to "1" (Left) slot, it would only record as a one sided recording on the left channel? Same with guitar as well (in the "2" Right slot)?
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You should be able to pan each channel to wherever you want it. If it isn't a function on the recorder, you can do it in the DAW.
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You should be able to pan each channel to wherever you want it. If it isn't a function on the recorder, you can do it in the DAW.
Cool, I'll have to experiment and see if I can figure it out, thanks!
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So, at a show on Friday Josie's (the singer I am referring to) mixer gave out on her, and she ended up buying a new one today. She went with the Behringer FLOW 8 (https://www.behringer.com/product.html?modelCode=0603-AEW), which looks like it has the ability to connect via USB to a computer. So, what I'm wondering is, am I understanding the specs right that I could run everything I want to do (vocal mic, guitar, and 2 external mics to capture the guitar in a more ambient way) through the 4 XLR inputs on the top left, and run the USB to my computer and record 4 separate tracks with Reaper? Or is that too good to be true?
(https://i.imgur.com/HGQLFuL.png)
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To answer your question, yes, the Flow 8 can send 4 separate tracks to your computer.
I did a quick peek at the Flow 8 and it looks like it has to be set in "Recording mode" for the Flow 8 to send the 4 individual channels via usb.
When the Flow 8 is in "Streaming mode" it will mix all the channels to a (2-channel) stereo track and send that via usb. (which is what you don't want).
I already saw a few youtube videos about the Flow 8, watch a bunch of them, especially if there's one about USB recording. I hate reading manuals, but when I get new gear I try to read/peruse the manual at least a couple times and watch a few youtube videos before trying anything with it.
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To answer your question, yes, the Flow 8 can send 4 separate tracks to your computer.
I did a quick peek at the Flow 8 and it looks like it has to be set in "Recording mode" for the Flow 8 to send the 4 individual channels via usb.
When the Flow 8 is in "Streaming mode" it will mix all the channels to a (2-channel) stereo track and send that via usb. (which is what you don't want).
I already saw a few youtube videos about the Flow 8, watch a bunch of them, especially if there's one about USB recording. I hate reading manuals, but when I get new gear I try to read/peruse the manual at least a couple times and watch a few youtube videos before trying anything with it.
I plan to dig a little more in to the manual at some point, just trying to get a feel for the larger picture with it, then dig in to the particulars. If I'm also recording her live shows through this, I would assume Streaming Mode would be the way to go?
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I looked at this on their website. Note you/she has a choice of 8 inputs. 5/6 & 7/8 can be paired or solo'd.
Assisted Setup for Beginners
Are you new to the world of audio and not sure which signal to put on different inputs? Don’t know how to use the EQ or compressor for dedicated signals? No problem. The FLOW 8 app provides you with a unique setup wizard that takes you step by step to make your music shine. After selecting the type of input, the assistant will offer you presets and tell you where to plug the cables in. Thanks to this innovative feature you can add your instruments and microphones no matter your skill level.
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If I'm also recording her live shows through this, I would assume Streaming Mode would be the way to go?
Assuming it doesn't affect the mixing of her live show, you would use Recording Mode and get a multitrack of her live performance (assuming you are up to mixing it in post). Definitely find out through research or testing if Recording Mode has any effect on her live mix.
If you used Streaming Mode, the stereo recording made via USB would probably be very vocal heavy and you would not be able to change the mix.
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If I'm also recording her live shows through this, I would assume Streaming Mode would be the way to go?
Assuming it doesn't affect the mixing of her live show, you would use Recording Mode and get a multitrack of her live performance (assuming you are up to mixing it in post). Definitely find out through research or testing if Recording Mode has any effect on her live mix.
If you used Streaming Mode, the stereo recording made via USB would probably be very vocal heavy and you would not be able to change the mix.
I am still in the process of learning that, but I would definitely prefer that. So, if I just use the 2 outputs on the top right, I should get a multitrack recording of it?
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So, if I just use the 2 outputs on the top right, I should get a multitrack recording of it?
No, the 2 outputs on the top right (MAIN L and MAIN R) are a sum, or a mix, of all of the inputs (1, 2, 3, 4). During live shows, she would use these outputs to send a stereo mix to the PA or speakers.
Technically this a 4 channel mixer, and the only way to get a multichannel recording is connecting a computer via usb cable in "Recording Mode". This is a pretty advanced recording technique, prepare for a steep learning curve. That's not to mention the post-production process; mixing and mastering is just as (if not more) daunting. I've always loved learning new techniques and ways of doing things so I don't want to discourage you. I wish you luck!
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Advice: Find a singer/songwriter recording on YouTube where you like their sound. Copy their setup.
Start with OurVinyl Sessions if you're not sure where to start. They make tapes in many 'like a home' locations (including outside) and run a variety of mics on solo voice/guitar.
For example, I think this tape of Tyler Childers is a better recording than pretty much any of his other (many) recordings, and he works with the best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QzcrflqDCg
That tape is just an SM7B on voice, a stereo (2-channel) XY mic on guitar a few inches above maybe the 8th fret (?), and he's plugged in so assume guitar gets an input too (total of 4 inputs). Can be replicated with a very cheap setup. Just watch out for fake SM7B's, as most on Ebay used are fake Alibaba.com copies that don't sound great.
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Advice: Find a singer/songwriter recording on YouTube where you like their sound. Copy their setup.
Start with OurVinyl Sessions if you're not sure where to start. They make tapes in many 'like a home' locations (including outside) and run a variety of mics on solo voice/guitar.
For example, I think this tape of Tyler Childers is a better recording than pretty much any of his other (many) recordings, and he works with the best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QzcrflqDCg
That tape is just an SM7B on voice, a stereo (2-channel) XY mic on guitar a few inches above maybe the 8th fret (?), and he's plugged in so assume guitar gets an input too (total of 4 inputs). Can be replicated with a very cheap setup. Just watch out for fake SM7B's, as most on Ebay used are fake Alibaba.com copies that don't sound great.
That's exactly the sound I'm hoping to get (and the 4 input setup I am envisioning), it won't necessarily be the quality you can get at a high end studio, but definitely good enough for distributing if she wants to, and it won't cost her anything but her time. Thanks for the link, makes it easier to visualize what I'm going for.
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Advice: Find a singer/songwriter recording on YouTube where you like their sound. Copy their setup.
Start with OurVinyl Sessions if you're not sure where to start. They make tapes in many 'like a home' locations (including outside) and run a variety of mics on solo voice/guitar.
For example, I think this tape of Tyler Childers is a better recording than pretty much any of his other (many) recordings, and he works with the best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QzcrflqDCg
That tape is just an SM7B on voice, a stereo (2-channel) XY mic on guitar a few inches above maybe the 8th fret (?), and he's plugged in so assume guitar gets an input too (total of 4 inputs). Can be replicated with a very cheap setup. Just watch out for fake SM7B's, as most on Ebay used are fake Alibaba.com copies that don't sound great.
That's exactly the sound I'm hoping to get (and the 4 input setup I am envisioning), it won't necessarily be the quality you can get at a high end studio, but definitely good enough for distributing if she wants to, and it won't cost her anything but her time. Thanks for the link, makes it easier to visualize what I'm going for.
Nice. As you know, pay a lot of attention to the exact setup locations, which probably matter more than the mics (although in this case SM7B does have a pretty unique sound). Usually, singers are told to eat the SM7B and get super close. For some reason, Tyler doesn't do that in this video. And it sounds amazing.
Same with the XY mic on his guitar. Not sure how much of that they put in the mix, but it's pretty high up and also close to the guitar opening.
So, unusual mic placements that would usually be recommended against, yet killer sound (in my opinion). Also, it looks to me like they're in a big untreated wooden room, with some treatment visible (panels and stuff), and a bunch of rugs on the floor to try and kill the floor reflections.
Room is going to matter a ton (more than mics, probably less than mic setup distances). Have a nice big living room, or a friend who does, or a buddy with stage access?
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re the Xy mic near the guitar opening:
I worked for Mark Fitzgerald who was a great mic tech, FOH guy for Heart and others (also great dude and mentor).
He would often, during acoustic studio sessions or all acoustic stage setups mic an acoustic guitar this way. In studio he would use two Beyer m160's in a crossed pattern (two fig 8's X'Y) very close to the mic hole but ABOVE the fingers.
Onstage, he would use two cardioids x-y close to the hole but beside and under the fingers.
SMsound is right- placement here can make a huge difference
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Mic placement on a guitar is dealer's choice.
There's plenty of "right" ways to do it and even more "wrong" ways.
The way the player picks or strums will impact the sound of some placements. The type of guitar will as well. The room and mic selection too.
The real trick is to gather up a few ideas and try several, listening back carefully, until you land on something that works given all of the variables.
Then, the next time, start with what worked and be willing to make adjustments as needed.
If it sounds good, roll tape.
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So, at a show on Friday Josie's (the singer I am referring to) mixer gave out on her, and she ended up buying a new one today. She went with the Behringer FLOW 8 (https://www.behringer.com/product.html?modelCode=0603-AEW), which looks like it has the ability to connect via USB to a computer. So, what I'm wondering is, am I understanding the specs right that I could run everything I want to do (vocal mic, guitar, and 2 external mics to capture the guitar in a more ambient way) through the 4 XLR inputs on the top left, and run the USB to my computer and record 4 separate tracks with Reaper? Or is that too good to be true?
(https://i.imgur.com/HGQLFuL.png)
I'm running in to issues trying to record off this mixer. The first attempt gave me great vocals but very low guitar sound. I posted on the Behringer message board about this and got a few ideas. Attempted to record again last night and got the opposite problem, great guitar but vocals are way down in the mix. I am able to rebalance pretty decently in iZotope, but I'd obviously rather get it right without having to do that every time. I am running from the "Phones" output using this with my 1/4" cables > my recorder:
(https://i.imgur.com/XjCXBYR.jpeg)
She has her guitar plugged in to "6R", and her mic plugged in to "1" (top left). We tried to set up "Monitor Send 1" through the app on her phone but got no sound that way at all. I am at a loss at this point...it wouldn't be the recorder causing an issue, would it? They basically all serve the same function...I'm not sure what other settings she can change to give me a balanced mixed.
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Don't use this..
(https://i.imgur.com/XjCXBYR.jpeg)
(which looks to be a 2x mono mini-jack > 1/4" TRS stereo adapter) ..into a balanced input on the recorder, if that's what you are describing.
Two options:
1) Record directly to the computer. Connect the mixer to the computer via USB. Connect your mics to the mixer's XLR inputs and plug the guitar into the "6R" 1/4" input as before. Record each of the inputs to separate tracks in whatever recording software you are using. After recording, mix on the computer.
2) Record directly to the recorder. Plug your mics directly into the recorder's XLR inputs. Plug the guitar into the mixer and run an XLR cable between one of the mixers main outs to the recorder. You can use the headphone out instead if that's the only cable you have. You can run the output from the mixer into the non-XLR inputs on the recorder if all the XLR inputs are being used by your mics. After recording, transfer the resulting individual tracks to the computer and mix there. This is essentially using the mixer as a "direct box" between the guitar and recorder.
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Don't use this..
(https://i.imgur.com/XjCXBYR.jpeg)
(which looks to be a 2x mono mini-jack > 1/4" TRS stereo adapter) ..into a balanced input on the recorder, if that's what you are describing.
Two options:
1) Record directly to the computer. Connect the mixer to the computer via USB. Connect your mics to the mixer's XLR inputs and plug the guitar into the "6R" 1/4" input as before. Record each of the inputs to separate tracks in whatever recording software you are using. After recording, mix on the computer.
2) Record directly to the recorder. Plug your mics directly into the recorder's XLR inputs. Plug the guitar into the mixer and run an XLR cable between one of the mixers main outs to the recorder. You can use the headphone out instead if that's the only cable you have. You can run the output from the mixer into the non-XLR inputs on the recorder if all the XLR inputs are being used by your mics. After recording, transfer the resulting individual tracks to the computer and mix there. This is essentially using the mixer as a "direct box" between the guitar and recorder.
Plug looks like a splitter for 1/8 stereo. I believe that it's not mono. You can run two headphones from one plug. 1/4 inch plug is two channels. Bob
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Could be. Easy enough to find out by checking with a multimeter. Either way, probably not what it wanted. The details of the connection matter but are unclear.
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Don't use this..
(https://i.imgur.com/XjCXBYR.jpeg)
(which looks to be a 2x mono mini-jack > 1/4" TRS stereo adapter) ..into a balanced input on the recorder, if that's what you are describing.
Two options:
1) Record directly to the computer. Connect the mixer to the computer via USB. Connect your mics to the mixer's XLR inputs and plug the guitar into the "6R" 1/4" input as before. Record each of the inputs to separate tracks in whatever recording software you are using. After recording, mix on the computer.
2) Record directly to the recorder. Plug your mics directly into the recorder's XLR inputs. Plug the guitar into the mixer and run an XLR cable between one of the mixers main outs to the recorder. You can use the headphone out instead if that's the only cable you have. You can run the output from the mixer into the non-XLR inputs on the recorder if all the XLR inputs are being used by your mics. After recording, transfer the resulting individual tracks to the computer and mix there. This is essentially using the mixer as a "direct box" between the guitar and recorder.
Sorry, should have specified this is for recording her live shows at the moment (didn't think it was worth starting a new thread for this question), so plugging directly in to the recorder isn't an option for that. The adapter pictured above is this one:
https://www.guitarcenter.com/Livewire/Essential-Headphone-Splitter-1-4-TRS-Male-to-Dual-1-4-TRS-Female-1500000013641.gc
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So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?
Check how the headphone and monitor out routing is set in the mixer. If set properly you should be able to use either out to the recorder. If using a patch cable between the mixer and recorder that has a male stereo mini-plug on each end, the adapter shown above can be used to adapt the 1/4" stereo headphone out. Just use one of the two minijacks and leave the other one disconnected.
From a quick look at the block diagram for the mixer it appears that each of the two 1/4" monitor outs are balanced mono, and can be set to either duplicate the XLR main outs, or provide separate monitor mixes. To use them for recording you'll either need two 1/4" patch cables (balanced or unbalanced) feeding separate channels on the recorder, or a 'Y' adapter that has two 1/4" mono TS plugs on the mixer side and a stereo mini plug on the recorder side.. if going into a stereo minijack input.
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So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?- Yes, she has a portable speaker she connects this to.
Check how the headphone and monitor out routing is set in the mixer. If set properly you should be able to use either out to the recorder. If using a patch cable between the mixer and recorder that has a male stereo mini-plug on each end, the adapter shown above can be used to adapt the 1/4" stereo headphone out. Just use one of the two minijacks and leave the other one disconnected.- That's what I thought as well, but every configuration we've tried has given me issues (good guitar levels but low vocals, or good vocals but low guitar, etc.). The last part though...so use the adapter above, but only use one of the outs to my recorder? Would it be any different than just using the headphone out directly to my recorder with just one cable? I'm assuming that would just be mono then?
From a quick look at the block diagram for the mixer it appears that each of the two 1/4" monitor outs are balanced mono, and can be set to either duplicate the XLR main outs, or provide separate monitor mixes. To use them for recording you'll either need two 1/4" patch cables (balanced or unbalanced) feeding separate channels on the recorder, or a 'Y' adapter that has two 1/4" mono TS plugs on the mixer side and a stereo mini plug on the recorder side.. if going into a stereo minijack input.- So would something like this (https://www.guitarcenter.com/Livewire/Essential-Y-Adapter-1-4-TS-to-1-4-TS-Female-Black-6-in-1500000013718.gc) work better (TS vs. the TRS one I have now?)
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So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?- Yes, she has a portable speaker she connects this to.
If she is only using a single speaker, just use the other XLR out of the mixer. Most (though not all) powered speakers have a pass-thru output, that would be another option. HW solution, since trying to configure the monitor/headphone outputs via the app hasn't worked out so well.
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So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?- Yes, she has a portable speaker she connects this to.
^ One portable speaker feed from one of the main XLR outs? In that case I presume she's getting whatever mono mix of both vocal and guitar is appropriate out to the speaker by using just one one of the main out XLRs. Is that correct?
In that case, the path of least resistance for making a mono recording that has exactly the same vox/guitar balance as what she is sending to the portable speaker will be to use the other main XLR out into the recorder. Just make sure the pan pots of all channels are centered. That should work as a fall-back option with no changes to the mixer setup, but will produce a mono recording. [Edit- this is the same as what jefflester is suggesting]
Ideally you'd instead setup the mixer to use the two monitor outs into two channels of your recorder, with the vocal isolated in one channel and the guitar in the other. You can then record both channels separately and mix them later. Will probably take some reviewing of the mixer's user manual to figure out how to use the monitor outs in this way, as it seems there are several options for routing signal to them.
Probably need to spend some time with the user manual anyway to figure out the discrepancy in levels that you are getting through the headphone output. Does it sound correct if you plug in headphones rather than the recorder? ..vocals in one ear and guitar in the other with good levels?
[snip..] so use the adapter above, but only use one of the outs to my recorder? Would it be any different than just using the headphone out directly to my recorder with just one cable? I'm assuming that would just be mono then?
As described the adapter would only be serving as a stereo 1/8" to stereo 1/4" adapter. Would be the same as using a single stereo cable with the appropriate termination on either end. Wouldn't necessarily be mono unless that's what's being routed to the headphone bus.
Here's something that is somewhat confusing which you may not be aware of-
Both the headphone out and the monitor outs use 1/4" TRS jacks, but they are wired differently.
The headphone output is an unbalanced stereo output (three wires = tip/ring/sleeve = Left/Right/Ground). It can alternately be used as a two channel line-out to the recorder, which is what you are trying to do. However in that case you'd need to set up the mixer to send a different mix to the headphone output than the main outs, since it sounds like she's sending a mono signal through the main outs to feed the portable speaker.
The monitor outs are also 1/4" TRS outs, but each is a single channel mono balanced output (tip/ring/sleeve = signal+/signal-/ground). You can insert either a TRS plug for a balanced output, or a TS plug for an unbalanced output, but either way each one is just a single channel. You would need to use both of them to get two channels out to the recorder, with the vocal and guitar signals being routed separately to either.
You don't want to patch a stereo TRS output into a balanced TRS input or vice-versa. Review the manual for the mixer, and check your wiring with the notes above in mind.
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So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?- Yes, she has a portable speaker she connects this to.
If she is only using a single speaker, just use the other XLR out of the mixer. Most (though not all) powered speakers have a pass-thru output, that would be another option. HW solution, since trying to configure the monitor/headphone outputs via the app hasn't worked out so well.
That may work, I can't remember for certain if she uses both or not, if she doesn't that may be the simplest route.
So the XLR main outs are being used to feed the PA?- Yes, she has a portable speaker she connects this to.
^ One portable speaker feed from one of the main XLR outs? In that case I presume she's getting whatever mono mix of both vocal and guitar is appropriate out to the speaker by using just one one of the main out XLRs. Is that correct?
In that case, the path of least resistance for making a mono recording that has exactly the same vox/guitar balance as what she is sending to the portable speaker will be to use the other main XLR out into the recorder. Just make sure the pan pots of all channels are centered. That should work as a fall-back option with no changes to the mixer setup, but will produce a mono recording. [Edit- this is the same as what jefflester is suggesting]
Ideally you'd instead setup the mixer to use the two monitor outs into two channels of your recorder, with the vocal isolated in one channel and the guitar in the other. You can then record both channels separately and mix them later. Will probably take some reviewing of the mixer's user manual to figure out how to use the monitor outs in this way, as it seems there are several options for routing signal to them.
Probably need to spend some time with the user manual anyway to figure out the discrepancy in levels that you are getting through the headphone output. Does it sound correct if you plug in headphones rather than the recorder? ..vocals in one ear and guitar in the other with good levels?
[snip..] so use the adapter above, but only use one of the outs to my recorder? Would it be any different than just using the headphone out directly to my recorder with just one cable? I'm assuming that would just be mono then?
As described the adapter would only be serving as a stereo 1/8" to stereo 1/4" adapter. Would be the same as using a single stereo cable with the appropriate termination on either end. Wouldn't necessarily be mono unless that's what's being routed to the headphone bus.
Here's something that is somewhat confusing which you may not be aware of-
Both the headphone out and the monitor outs use 1/4" TRS jacks, but they are wired differently.
The headphone output is an unbalanced stereo output (three wires = tip/ring/sleeve = Left/Right/Ground). It can alternately be used as a two channel line-out to the recorder, which is what you are trying to do. However in that case you'd need to set up the mixer to send a different mix to the headphone output than the main outs, since it sounds like she's sending a mono signal through the main outs to feed the portable speaker.
The monitor outs are also 1/4" TRS outs, but each is a single channel mono balanced output (tip/ring/sleeve = signal+/signal-/ground). You can insert either a TRS plug for a balanced output, or a TS plug for an unbalanced output, but either way each one is just a single channel. You would need to use both of them to get two channels out to the recorder, with the vocal and guitar signals being routed separately to either.
You don't want to patch a stereo TRS output into a balanced TRS input or vice-versa. Review the manual for the mixer, and check your wiring with the notes above in mind.
Lots to take in here...according to someone on the Behringer forum, there is a way to run what you want through the "Monitor" outs without affecting her setup through the speaker, but we couldn't figure it out the other night. Ideally I'd love to do what you suggested and use both spots, one for vocals and the other for guitar, then I can mix in post as I wish. In this case, is a balanced mix or unbalance mix preferable? Dumb question at this point in the game I'm sure, but I'm not clear on it and how I achieve one over the other.
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Ideally you'd instead setup the mixer to use the two monitor outs into two channels of your recorder, with the vocal isolated in one channel and the guitar in the other. You can then record both channels separately and mix them later. Will probably take some reviewing of the mixer's user manual to figure out how to use the monitor outs in this way, as it seems there are several options for routing signal to them.
Only manual I found was just a quickstart guide and didn't have too much info, ~4 pages and then repeated in 9 languages.* Challenge here is the functionality may be tied up in the app presumably on the performer's phone so a bit difficult for Dan to get too familiar with it or make too many adjustments. It certainly seems like it should be possible to set up one monitor send for the guitar and one for the vocals though. One advantage of using the main mix is that it will have the desired (live) effects like reverb. Monitor mixes can have effects as well, but hard to set that up real time to make sure it is as desired.
*https://cdn.mediavalet.com/aunsw/musictribe/3aRR_S2Cb0qu6eCbcKlC7A/JH4xFMwE7U6fLyB9KyTe4g/Original/QSG_BE_0603-AEW_FLOW-8_WW.pdf
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Lots to take in here...according to someone on the Behringer forum, there is a way to run what you want through the "Monitor" outs without affecting her setup through the speaker, but we couldn't figure it out the other night. Ideally I'd love to do what you suggested and use both spots, one for vocals and the other for guitar, then I can mix in post as I wish. In this case, is a balanced mix or unbalance mix preferable? Dumb question at this point in the game I'm sure, but I'm not clear on it and how I achieve one over the other.
Now "balanced" or "unbalanced" can mean two things in your question since it can refer to both the type of signal/connector/cable (TS vs TRS) or the relative level of the two channels (guitar, vocal). Since both the mixer and your recorders both have balanced TRS jacks there is no reason not to stick with that. Balance of the instruments - either you will have no control (taking a mono main output that she is creating for live sound) or you are recording the two channels (guitar/vocal) independently so it doesn't really matter since you will adjust in post. You'd just want to set the two channels so you get good level for each.
I just found this video talking about setting up the monitors, you can do it without the app.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tq77oOSwvIc&
Based on this video it looks like you have to (re)adjust the sliders for the monitor mixes and the main mix, since there is only one slider per channel. So if she is setup and has her desired levels for guitar and vocals in the main mix, you'd need to note those levels and return the sliders to those positions after you set up the two monitor mixes so she can be a the same setup in case she needs to adjust during performance. Or setup your monitor outputs before she finalizes her live mix.
Based on that video:
Push Mon 1 button, adjust CH1 slider (vocals mic) to get good levels, return slider to bottom
Push Mon 2 button, adjust CH6 slider (direct guitar) to get good levels, return slider to bottom
Push Main button and she sets up (or returns to) desired levels on CH1/CH6
Not sure how the effects on the MON channels plays into it, if they default to any previous setting or not. So if there aren't any effects it'll be quite dry sounding, though you can add some effects in post.
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Not sure how the effects on the MON channels plays into it, if they default to any previous setting or not. So if there aren't any effects it'll be quite dry sounding, though you can add some effects in post.
This video talks about adding effects to the monitors, it uses the same effects/levels as the mains, but need to make some button selections on the app. @ 5:30
https://youtu.be/PC3LTR1vUEI?si=NKMXCu-coxA2kt_N&t=331