Live Performance Question |
ven. 28 sept. 2007, 19:00
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#1
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Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 5 Inscrit : 08 févr. 04 Lieu : Portland - US Membre no 35,250 |
Okay, my setup has been the following when playing live shows with my band.
I play the M-audio keystation 49e which is hooked up through the USB of my PowerBook G4. I ues software such as Reason and Miroslav Philharmonik as my sounds. THEN I use the the headphone out to a keyboard amp(with a 1/4 inch to 1/4 inch jacks cord that has a 1/8 converter so that I can plug it into my headphones OUT on my Powerbook. This setup ain't working for me. When I play most instruments(piano, harpsichord, etc), the lower keys are so much louder than the higher keys that I cannot concentrate on performance. Instead I am riding the volume levels. How I can fix this? I only have a headphones out jack as an out on the Powerbook G4 and it isn't delivering stable levels to my amp. I also own a Tascam US-122 which I use with guitar stuff, but haven't figured out if it could help me send the signal from my computer to an amp in a better way. I am really frustrated. |
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sam. 29 sept. 2007, 08:06
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#2
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Junior Member Groupe : Members Messages : 179 Inscrit : 13 mars 04 Lieu : Hawaii North Shore Oahu - US Membre no 38,418 |
Aloha look at this Alesis Multimix 8 USB http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/MultiMix8USB/
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sam. 29 sept. 2007, 10:57
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#3
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Junior Member Groupe : Members Messages : 122 Inscrit : 16 juil. 06 Lieu : London - UK Membre no 81,499 |
If you really are getting uneven levels (rather than uneven frequency response from the amp), run the H/P output through a compressor before it hits the amp. If its an eq issue then run it through a cheap graphic eq. In either case, I'd recommend looking at Behringer gear - its not the nicest, but its very cheap.
One thought I had while typing the above, as the H/P out is stereo and your keyboard amp is probably mono, have you checked which side of the stereo signal is hitting the amp? If the instrument you play has a wide stereo spread and the amp is only getting the left channel then the bass notes will have much more weight. Ideally, you should get a cable made up that takes the tip and ring from the mini-jack and combines them both on the tip of the mono jack at the other end. Alternatively, you may be able to edit your software instruments to remove stereo panning. -------------------- www.myspace.com/commercialmusicstudios
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sam. 29 sept. 2007, 15:49
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#4
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Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 10 Inscrit : 05 mai 05 Lieu : London - UK Membre no 65,271 |
As you are using the phono output of your laptop (stereo 1/8 inch) it sounds to me as if only one channel is heard on your amp. If you're using a stereo jack to jack cable your amp (which I assume has a mono input) will not make contact with one of the channels. I would try to get or solder you own cable connecting the cables of the tip and ring of the 1/8 inch jack onto the tip of the 1/4 jack. Even better and more versatile use a mixer in between.
S Okay, my setup has been the following when playing live shows with my band.
I play the M-audio keystation 49e which is hooked up through the USB of my PowerBook G4. I ues software such as Reason and Miroslav Philharmonik as my sounds. THEN I use the the headphone out to a keyboard amp(with a 1/4 inch to 1/4 inch jacks cord that has a 1/8 converter so that I can plug it into my headphones OUT on my Powerbook. This setup ain't working for me. When I play most instruments(piano, harpsichord, etc), the lower keys are so much louder than the higher keys that I cannot concentrate on performance. Instead I am riding the volume levels. How I can fix this? I only have a headphones out jack as an out on the Powerbook G4 and it isn't delivering stable levels to my amp. I also own a Tascam US-122 which I use with guitar stuff, but haven't figured out if it could help me send the signal from my computer to an amp in a better way. I am really frustrated. |
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