![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| All Things GarageBand | |||||||
| LIVE RECORDING |
| Home Input Using microphones Recording Vocals Recording Instruments |
Master Pitch | how low can you go? | |
|
You can change the pitch of an entire song with the Master Pitch control located in the Master Track. You will need to use this when you want to match your tracks to another recording. The standard pitch, known as concert pitch, is A440 Hz - but in many parts of the world A442 has become the new standard pitch. This difference is slight enough that you will often get away with unmatched recordings.
But there are other situations that make the Master Pitch control very useful: | ||
| Get some air | ||
| |
GarageBand's gorgeous line up of amps may tempt you to always record electric guitar by plugging it in directly. There is certainly enough variation in the amps and amp settings to produce hundreds of different guitar sounds this way. However, recording the guitarist by placing a good mic in front of the amp can give a new, individual dimension to the guitar sound: a whole lot of factors now come into play: the room size, type of amp and mic, distance of mic from amp. There is something attractive about a sound that has traveled through the air before reaching your hard disk. The same goes for synths and bass - experiment. | |
| Mic & Line | ||
| |
There are two kinds: "mic level" signals have low voltage, for example microphones and el. guitars; and "line level" signals, stronger, from synths, your stereo system, etc. Electric guitars can often produce a signal that falls in-between mic and line level - this is sometimes known as "instrument level". You will know that the signal coming from your instrument/microphone/mixer/amp is right when the GarageBand volume sliders are neither at the very left or right of their range, but comfortably in the middle. This gives you enough flexibility to get the right mix. | |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
| bits | ||
| |
A reminder: Make sure you set the Audio input to 16 bit when using the Imic. GarageBand 1.0 may have reset it to 8-bit upon launch. Here's how: -In the Finder, go to Applications-Utilities. -Open the Audio Midi Setup App - Click on the Audio Devices tab -Choose the iMic under "Properties For" on the left - You now see "Audio Input"; select "2ch-16bit" instead of "2ch-8bit". See also our tip on "Input Volume" on the GarageDoor Set-up | Import page. | |
| To the Top | ||||||||
| Home | Tutorials | Setup | Gear | Loops | Instruments | Live Recording | Editing & Mixing | the Music |
| Subscribe to the "DoorPost" newsletter. | © Victor Hookstra 2006 | |||||||