
I have just finished my review of Mixer Digital. All I can say is that I would be lost without Mixer Digital.
How do you make a good violin sound on a recording digital mixer. Because I recorded with keyboard and wire.?
Read TitleBasically I record on a digital mixer aka on my computer which is called "Audacity". It is for Mixer Digital free and good quality. Anyways I recorded my violin sounds with my yamaha keyboard and put a wire in back of keyboard and transmitted sounds from keyboard onto laptop mixer. The only problem is it sounds really weird, when it comes to listening to the violin sound. It sounds too electronically bound. Not like a normal violin. So how can I improve this? If there is any way? Or do I have to record a real violin? lol.
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An old tape recorder would be cheapest. Just remember to press PLAY and REC. at the same time ;p
What are you trying to do by connecting a computer to the switcher?Connecting the MX-4 directly – and digitally – to any computer (Mac or otherwise) would normally require a DV port. In this context, DV, IEEE1394 and Firewire are all the same thing.Link to the manual:http://www.focusinfo.com/dynassets/documents/products/MX-4_UserManual.pdfI just read through it. The MX 4 has no DV out port. See the rear panel on page 21. The video out resources are all composite (analog) connections. Also refer to the Specifications on page 155 and 156. There are references to analog video ports – but no digital video ports.Page 73 refers to the ethernet port – this is a normal RJ45 wired LAN port than “can import background, foregrounds, and still frame jpeg images to or from your unit” and refers to chapter 13 for additional information on setting up the ftp session for transferring the foregrounds or backgrounds. Video (in or out) is not transferred over this link.If your goal is to get video from the Mac to the switcher or to get video from the switcher to the Mac, you will probably need an “analog/digital bridge” like those from Canopus.
There are many ways to do it. The simplest way is to just get some recording software on a nearby computer (maybe “audacity” at soundforge.net). Then just cable the aux out on the board to the line in on the computer soundcard (blue connector). The sound card converts the analog to digital – no need to worry about that part.Both PC or Mac will do the job. If the rest of the church building has PC’s, it might be good to go with that. If the computer is on the church LAN, the file transfer will be easy.What we do at my church is record straight to a CD recorder for the CD ministry and also straight to a laptop for Mp3 files. E-mail me if you have other questions.God bless you!
You can always try Virtual DJIf piracy is ok with you,lolhttp://thepiratebay.org/torrent/5888476Download it from here
Pretty much any analog mixer will work great. Just get one with enough channels for your needs.Here is a great inexpensive mixer with four channels:http://www.zzounds.com/item–BEHXENTX802
Adobe Soundbooth has very good quality and tons of very capable mastering racks. I don’t know if a digital mixer is what you’re looking for, since Soundbooth has no multitrack capability.Adobe Audition does. It’s what I use for my multitrack projects. If you’d like, you could use both of these products together. You can record individual tracks with Audition and sync them with Soundbooth.You should also look up Audacity. It’s a freeware multitrack recording program. Very good quality.
The whole point about having digital audio is so that a high-bandwidth digital signal is used instead of analog audio, and the digital signal is impervious to noise, because any noise in the cable is cancelled out when the digital signal is decoded back to analog. The noise you describe is either being added to the audio signal AFTER the digital signal passes through to the mixer (so it’s an internal mixer problem), or the noise is being added to the audio BEFORE it’s encoded into the digital signal (so it’s an internal problem with the CD player, or a bad CD). If there’s too much noise in a digital line, the signal will usually just shut down until it gets synced back up – you hear this when talking on a cellphone in a bad reception area, the sound doesn’t get noisy, it just gets full of gaps and then maybe quits altogether.I’d say the next step is to send the CD player’s signal to a different mixer, preferrably one that’s known to be good (used for a long time by someone else). If the noise is still there, it’s the CD. If there’s no noise, it’s the mixer. My guess would be the mixer anyway – all signals in a CD player are digital, there should be no analog involved, unless it converts to analog and then BACK to digital SPDIF for some reason (which would be ridiculous).
A DJ mixer can be digital or analog. An analog mixer does not convert the input signal to a digital signal and proccess it. A digital mixer does.Analog mixers are generally cheaper. Digital mixers off many different options for signal proccessing that an analog one cannot.If you are a beginner, you probably should start with an inexpensive analog mixer.Analog DJ mixer:http://www.amazon.com/Numark-M2-Professional-Scratch-Mixer/dp/B001EO2SRE/ref=sr_1_15?s=musical-instruments&ie=UTF8&qid=1291931412&sr=1-15Digital DJ mixer:http://www.zzounds.com/item–BEHDDM4000
If you have a cdj then all you need is a simple analog mixer:http://www.zzounds.com/item–NUMM2
Electrical engineering with a minor in music.
You have 2 options:1. Get a professional camcorder with a hard drive adapter (like the Sony HVR-V1 and HDR-60 hard drive combination)2. Get a consumer HDD (hard disc drive) camcorder with a mic in connection. You will then need to purchase an audio device from Beachtek to adapt XLR to the appropriate RCA or mini-plug mic connection on the camcorder.The first option is much better since you will have 2 high quality recording systems, and one system can back up the other. The second option will probably be cheaper but not by a whole lot when you compare overall use and quality.You may also need to review another consideration. Hard drives have a lot of moving parts that can break if dropped, shaken, or otherwise mishandled. Instead of an HDD camcorder, choose a flash memory system. Flash memory is easier to store and can expand beyond the limitation of HDD.The most important part advantage of a flash memory camcorders is that these models have the least amount of moving parts of any camcorder. They also have the smallest parts in general. This makes them so light and compact that you can take them anywhere and store them easily. This becomes very important if you need to move the camera a lot or travel from service to service.
Kevin – You can hook them up to the mixers RCA outputs no problem. You just need to get a pair of RCA to 1/4 inch cables. They are available at your local DJ store or Radio Shack:http://www.zzounds.com/item–HOSCPR20