baby baby baby blue a double fester 50s r'n'r litlr on tape

Started by Oldrottenhead, May 12, 2016, 11:37:19 AM

Oldrottenhead

Quote from: Johnny Robbo on May 13, 2016, 01:45:05 AMAmazing quality recording - I could never get this kind of quality when I was an analogue man back in the distant '90s. Brilliant performace too! I notice the cans of Saint Etienne in the pic too - Aldi's finest: perfect for getting the musical juices flowing  ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
yeah aldi's saint etiene help get the juices running.
whit goes oan in ma heid



Jemima's
Kite

The
Bunkbeds

Honker

Nevermet

Longhair
Tigers

Oldrottenhead
"In order to compose, all you need to do is remember a tune that nobody else has thought of."
- Robert Schumann

cuthbert

Analog level meters on your cassette deck? Color me jealous!

I like the litlr performance. Did you do some panning on the inputs?
recorder
Boss Micro BR
recorder
Boss BR-80
recorder
Boss BR-800
                                        
recorder
Adobe Audition
recorder
Cubase

Oldrottenhead

Quote from: cuthbert on May 13, 2016, 12:10:19 PMAnalog level meters on your cassette deck? Color me jealous!

I like the litlr performance. Did you do some panning on the inputs?
no panning. Panning was done with mic positioning.one mic recorded to left channel other to the right channel. Would be interesting to do a live band recording using this. But something wrong with heads or cassette as I cant erase. Anything I now record goes over the top of existing recording. Not sure how to sort this but could be a project to exercise my aging mind.
whit goes oan in ma heid



Jemima's
Kite

The
Bunkbeds

Honker

Nevermet

Longhair
Tigers

Oldrottenhead
"In order to compose, all you need to do is remember a tune that nobody else has thought of."
- Robert Schumann

Oldrottenhead

After some reading I think it just needs a good clean.
whit goes oan in ma heid



Jemima's
Kite

The
Bunkbeds

Honker

Nevermet

Longhair
Tigers

Oldrottenhead
"In order to compose, all you need to do is remember a tune that nobody else has thought of."
- Robert Schumann