Squids wrote:The upcoming manuals for STm and MT will explain this, so sorry you guys have to fly solo until that arrives - it is coming soon. But luckily I am here to be able to tell you things like that myself.ebow wrote: i understand what you are saying about the overheads but if i were paying for the studio time i wouldn't compromise....not if it had such an impact as it does......i realise that trying to record in a vacuum and discarding all extraneous noises is not a reflection on reality but i would like to get as close to it as possible...i want the sound of the piece and not the interpretation of the room or the mic....or at least as little as possible
but anyway![]()
i'll give your suggestion a try...i just assumed that the mixer volumes and instrument volumes were one and the same....you don't need to go to any extra trouble to write this in....if this works , it works
thanks
In the studio - even if you're paying - you would still have to compromise.But, what I mean is, to do what you want to do some people in the studio have just overdubbed cymbals separately. I think Stewart Copeland may have done that. It's rare I think but when people wanted a certain sound they found a way to do it... through compromises and experimentation. The same and more can be done in the virtual world with samples and that is why we made the NEW Drum Masters 2 (as opposed to DM1) have the ability to have discrete mic mixing PER kit piece. The output mixer is more like a mix buss. So you can mix at BOTH places and really tailor the kit EXACTLY how you want... and of course it doesn't have to reflect reality at all! Each person should just tweak it to their liking and in some ways you can actually end up with a kit sounding much BETTER than one could in a real studio drum session.
stewart copeland, eh ??..so i'm in good company
if one were using direct cymbal mics, is it not possible to gate them to stop bleed
good news about the manuals.....i'm sure there are many thing to learn about this to tailor it to our likes....so many good samples it should be impossible not to get quite a few excellent kits out of this
