I pretty recently got a powered mixer and everything's going through it when we have jam nights. I really want to record part of the jam to see what it sounds like the next day (kind of hard to tell when we're playing). What's the easiest/cheapest way to record from the mixer out? I actually have a 1980s-era 4 track recorder but I'm not sure I have any cassettes and I took it apart to gut it for parts and I'm not sure I have enough to put it back together again. I'd really prefer some way to record digitally anyway since we usually play for like ~6 hours and it would be nice to be able to hop around. I guess I could tote the digital interface and a laptop down there and it would probably at least sort of work but I'd rather not if there's some easier way that doesn't cost too much.
Ive often wondered how to do this as well. Way back, @RedLesPaul posted some snappy front-of-house mixes that were recorded using the venue's board via the RCAs. I've attempted this but my levels were always wrong.
tlarson58 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 09, 2021 4:43 am
Ive often wondered how to do this as well. Way back, @RedLesPaul posted some snappy front-of-house mixes that were recorded using the venue's board via the RCAs. I've attempted this but my levels were always wrong.
tlarson58 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 09, 2021 4:43 am
Ive often wondered how to do this as well. Way back, @RedLesPaul posted some snappy front-of-house mixes that were recorded using the venue's board via the RCAs. I've attempted this but my levels were always wrong.
What did you try recording into?
I made it too hard with an old recording console. I have a Tascam DR-5 that I will use next time (a simplified version of the unit above).
Does the console have a USB out? A lot of the newer ones do. Usually they are limited to stereo or a small number of tracks so it is not easy to adjust the mix, but it beats going digital to analog and back to digital on the output.