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-   -   Electronics Need Camcorder Advice For Live Music (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=303941)

Dinny Bossa Nova 11-23-2016 06:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sorter (Post 12573644)

I'm quite very nearly almost turned on in an I don't get it sort of way.

Is that so wrong?

Dinny

ghak99 11-23-2016 08:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dinny Bossa Nova (Post 12573416)
This is what I was thinking would be better than the GoPro. A mic like this on the Canon should make tons better looking and sounding footage.

Dinny

No way in hell would I try to do what you're wanting to do with a go pro, and I own 3 of the over priced little ****ers.

I assume some of your live performances will be under fairly low light? If that's the case, you might want to get your hands on one of these cameras and make sure you're happy with the noise in the footage in low light situations. In the past, Canon has definitely had the upper hand over the equivalent Sony with regards to the actual in the field lux ratings.

I don't know what kind of shows you do, but I bet you'll eventually want to run a mic on your camera as well as an audio recorder similar to what rabble mentioned earlier and have them mixed into something more appealing to whoever your audience is.

Randallflagg 11-23-2016 10:37 PM

Many Camcorders will get the job done (as far as live music goes). The problem is that unless you have a feed directly from the board (the house system) the audio will most likely be disappointing. If you can arrange with whomever is running sound to get you an Aux out, you can get fairly good audio, however.

Demonpenz 11-23-2016 11:20 PM

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7jw_IzWrHys" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

rabblerouser 11-24-2016 09:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ghak99 (Post 12573729)
No way in hell would I try to do what you're wanting to do with a go pro, and I own 3 of the over priced little ****ers.

I assume some of your live performances will be under fairly low light? If that's the case, you might want to get your hands on one of these cameras and make sure you're happy with the noise in the footage in low light situations. In the past, Canon has definitely had the upper hand over the equivalent Sony with regards to the actual in the field lux ratings.

I don't know what kind of shows you do, but I bet you'll eventually want to run a mic on your camera as well as an audio recorder similar to what rabble mentioned earlier and have them mixed into something more appealing to whoever your audience is.

Get this and a low priced Tascam PCM recorder. Do the audio separately and sync them later in post :

http://www.church-audio.com/viewitem.php?productid=21

You'll be much happier in the long run.

rabblerouser 11-24-2016 10:02 AM

I
Quote:

Originally Posted by BiStateNo (Post 12573815)
Many Camcorders will get the job done (as far as live music goes). The problem is that unless you have a feed directly from the board (the house system) the audio will most likely be disappointing. If you can arrange with whomever is running sound to get you an Aux out, you can get fairly good audio, however.

If you're playing at a theatre or Arena, or the engineer can give you a dedicated stereo or mono mixdown, sure.

Most clubs and small venues don't have much in FOH except vox and kick drum. Very little guitar or bass. The sound guy is mixing to the room, not the recording. 9 times out of 10, a raw SBD feed is damn near unlistenable.

The Tascam DR-2D (as well as the DR-40 and Zoom h4n) has a 4 track capability, so I usually take the board feed and the omni mic source and I just post mix them in Pro Tools.

The omni mics are usually the basis of the recording, then I bring in the SBD and pan until the vocals sound "right".

I can post a couple sample if you like.


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