I use the dp24 for demo work. I left music in the mid 90s, I did not keep up with technology, so not recording on a computer is very helpful for me. Like most Tascam products, it's good enough for what I need to do at home.
Software and recording gear has changed so much since the 90's that you can make a decent recording on just about anything now a days. There are true bedroom artists who are getting played on the radio! I'm with you, I work on a computer all day. I don't want to work on one when I'm playing music. Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for this tutorial. I bought this 4 and 1/2 years ago and haven't looked at it since. My question is, how do you access different versions like you said so that you can listen to them in the car? At what point are you able to save them and name them, as you said? I didn't follow that.
Happy Sunday Mike. Since I couldn't watch all of this yesterday, I'm watching the whole enchalada 😂 today. I'm 45 minutes in where you're recording the bass. Ive never used the onboard tuner and I should. I've been using my clip on. Another thing, after you saying how much you love auto punch, I have to learn how to use that too on my DP-24. Enjoying this video so far. 👍
I'm glad you are enjoying it. To me, it doesn't matter what tuner you use as long as you use it on all the instruments, so they all have the same tuning. The onboard tuner is just convenient.
I find gain staging the biggest challenge on this machine…you don’t seem too concerned with occasional peaks into the dreaded red zone…should I not be worried about that either? Thanks…
@@rockinvida1960 I'm from the old cassette days of recording so I do let it pop over the red line once in a while. I find that if you run the DP32 in the highest sampling and bit rate (44.8/24bit) will allow you to peak out a bit.
@@MikeFoerster okay so i watched that video, but what im really looking for is a video to see someone actually plugging in a guitar setting levels and records down a basic track and listing n a play back, then mulit tracking over top with another instrument to see the process in action on a DP
This is probably the best end to end real walk through of production on this machine I have seen. Thank you!
Thank you!
I use the dp24 for demo work.
I left music in the mid 90s, I did not keep up with technology,
so not recording on a computer is very helpful for me. Like most Tascam products, it's good enough for what I need to do at home.
Software and recording gear has changed so much since the 90's that you can make a decent recording on just about anything now a days. There are true bedroom artists who are getting played on the radio! I'm with you, I work on a computer all day. I don't want to work on one when I'm playing music. Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for this tutorial. I bought this 4 and 1/2 years ago and haven't looked at it since.
My question is, how do you access different versions like you said so that you can listen to them in the car? At what point are you able to save them and name them, as you said? I didn't follow that.
I'll make a video about it to help you out.
Happy Sunday Mike. Since I couldn't watch all of this yesterday, I'm watching the whole enchalada 😂 today. I'm 45 minutes in where you're recording the bass. Ive never used the onboard tuner and I should. I've been using my clip on. Another thing, after you saying how much you love auto punch, I have to learn how to use that too on my DP-24. Enjoying this video so far. 👍
I'm glad you are enjoying it. To me, it doesn't matter what tuner you use as long as you use it on all the instruments, so they all have the same tuning. The onboard tuner is just convenient.
I find gain staging the biggest challenge on this machine…you don’t seem too concerned with occasional peaks into the dreaded red zone…should I not be worried about that either? Thanks…
@@rockinvida1960 I'm from the old cassette days of recording so I do let it pop over the red line once in a while. I find that if you run the DP32 in the highest sampling and bit rate (44.8/24bit) will allow you to peak out a bit.
So how do you get the wave file to a format that is consumable by platforms like iTunes or pandora?
I use Audacity and export it as MP3's or FLACC whichever they need.
hi i just bought one of these machines DP32 do you have a video on how to start at zero and lay a track down and buildup from there?
I think I do. Let me look and see.
ruclips.net/video/78k4Oxs59ew/видео.html
Also, if you have any questions, I'm happy to help.
@@MikeFoerster okay so i watched that video, but what im really looking for is a video to see someone actually plugging in a guitar setting levels and records down a basic track and listing n a play back, then mulit tracking over top with another instrument to see the process in action on a DP
Ok. I'll see what I can do for you.