Recording
Music and Cues
There are two ways to record a dance with cues. The first is similar
to the way it is usually done with minidisk using a single sound
file. The second way is to record music and cues in separate files.
-
Connect your music source to the left channel of the stereo
line-input of your computer, and your voice source (amplified
microphone) to the right channel. This will usually mean using
a cable with a 1/8" stereo phono plug on one end (the computer
end) and 2 RCA plugs on the other. The Left RCA plug connects
to your Music-Out jack on your turntable and the Right RCA plug
connects to the Voice-out jack.
-
Play the music and speak the cues as you use your sound editor
to record both into a stereo sound file. Here's
how to do that using Audacity.)
-
Compress the sound file into MP3 format
-
Attach the sound file to the dance.

This works well enough, and is the method we used for the first
few years of DanceMaster.
But I noticed that when we played back just the music channel of
a stereo recording, it didn't sound as good as a mono recording
of the same material. In fact, some music sounded pretty bad.
This probably has to do with the compression. Usually the left
and right channels of a stereo music recording are very, very similar.
A lot of that duplicate information can be discarded in compressing
the file. In our case, however, the two channels are very different.
When just one channel (the music) is played back, it is influenced
by the other (voice) channel, and a certain amount of distortion
results. In some cases, a lot of distortion.
Now there is a better way to do it.
The best way to record cues is to put them into a separate file
altogether. That is record the music in mono (or stereo, for that
matter) in one file, edit it as necessary, and save it. Then listen
to that file as you record your cues into another file.
DanceMaster can play
the two files together, and you can even adjust the timing of the
cues as you are playing them at the dance.
Advantages of this approach include:
-
The result sounds better, whether you are playing it with or
without cues.
-
You get better control over the voice / music balance.
-
You can adjust the timing of the cues after they are recorded.
-
You only have to record the music once. Then you can re-record
the cues as often as necessary. This can be a blessing if you
are working with a difficult record (one that skips or has a
lot of noise, for instance).
-
You don't need a separate amplifier for your microphone - you
can use your Hilton (or whatever.)
-
You can use the same music file for multiple dances (i.e. Paper
Moon II and Paper Moon IV)
-
Once you get the hang of it, it is actually easier than doing
it the other way.
Here is how to do it
|