@Itchy said:
Hello Mr. Kaufmann! I'd have the studio engineer provide a discreet relatively dry track as well as separate tracks recorded/ "live-mixed" taking advantage of whatever ambience sounds good... or avec his/her favorite studio reverb. That way, you'll have options when you plunk the tracks into your existing mix & the MIR environment.
re: studio ambience; ....
I would like to emphasize that the music examples above are only listed for pleasure. They should motivate everyone to play instruments themselves, together with VSL.
Thanks for the tips.
As you can see, the recording with the children was made in 2004, Bethlehemstrings in 2006 and the Adagio of Albinoni probably 2003 - so all at the very beginning of the story of VSL itself. I simply enjoyed trying everything because I suddenly had an orchestra at my disposal. For people of today this is (unfortunately) nothing more special. At that time this fact was quite groundbreaking. So I can't change the recording conditions back then. Meanwhile the children are adults... π
How to record instruments for playing togehter with samples (of VSL)
I can support Itchy's tips for recording instruments: The instruments should be recorded as "DRY" as possible. Nevertheless, you should keep in mind that each acoustic instrument should be microphoned in the same way as you would for classical sound recordings. So "Dry" does not necessarily mean as close as possible to the instrument. No, as an example for the violin: The best distance is 1m above the f-holes). You can find a video or a website for almost every instrument, how best to record. Search for this task with Google.
Since these tips are not intended for professionals (they know them already): It doesn't necessarily have to be a Royer microphone or a Millennia microphone amplifier. It also works with a "Rode NT5" for example or an other good budget microphone and it works also with the amplifier of "your audio interface". Nevertheless, If you have good hardware, use it, of course.
Large instruments (grand piano, organ,...) should be recorded in stereo in any case (AB, ORTF,...), smaller instruments may be recorded also in mono. Classical Vocals: I would record them with M/S technology. This way you can add a bit of three-dimensionality to the voice, which seems more natural later in the mix (Listen to the singing examples). If you don't have the Microphones for M/S, it also works with one alone (mono).
By the way: The instruments at VSL were recorded with this background as well - earlier in the Silent Stage. So exactly at the right distance and still as "dry" as possible and as we know, of course all of them in stereo.
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So if you have recorded your voice or instrument in this way, the conditions are good for mixing the result with samples - whether in "MIR" or with a conventional audio mix.
I wish you success
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