Wow, thanks guys!!!
pjmuck wrote:
I really like your sound/video quality too. Can you tell us how you went about recording the basses?
Yeah, absolutely.
You'll probably chuckle, because it's kind of a hokey way of putting it all together.
My set-up is as follows:
1.) Bass into a Boss DR-880 drum machine... that drum machine has amp modeling for guitar and bass, so I use it to record with. The setting being used is "Clean Bass"... so what you're hearing in those videos is pretty much a direct representation of the basses I'm using.
2.) I run the Boss DR-880 S/PDIF out into an M-Audio Fast Track Ultra... it's basically a fancy external soundcard that allows you to record analog instruments directly into your computer.
3.) Audio recording software is Reaper... it's the BEST $60 I have ever spent in my life... it's basically ProTools for 1/100th the cost.
4.) The video was taken with a Canon PowerShot S3IS still camera.
5.) Video editing was all done with Windows Movie Maker... comes free with Windows OS... it's SUPER cheesy and has ZERO solid user features.
6.) Computer is a 4-year-old Dell running Windows 7 OS.
The first thing I do is start a new file in Reaper and drop drag-n-drop an MP3 of whatever tune I want to do... Reaper automatically creates a stereo track of the MP3. Then I create a second track for my bass... check levels to make sure I can hear everything.
Then I start recording the video on the camera, and then start recording the audio on my computer... once the recording is done, I stop the camera and the computer. Then I do a quick "mix" of the song and my bass line, render it to MP3, and upload the video onto the computer from the camera.
I then open Windows Movie Maker, drag and drop the video into that and edit out the unwanted footage (me pressing the record button, etc) and add the title and credits... once that is complete I add the rendered MP3 of my bass and the original song and move it around until it synchs with the video. This part probably takes the longest since you have to do it using visual queues and constantly going back and forth between the recorded tracks and the audio that the camera mic picked up while recording... Windows Movie Maker is NOT set up to do this kind of thing accurately, so I'll usually have to render the video several times trying to make sure I have the audio and video matched perfectly. It can take a while sometimes.
And that's it...
Probably sounds a little more intense than it actually is... but, it works.