As fresh as it gets.

There are some neat recording capabilities available.

The best quality is attained by putting a microphone on every instrument and voice. The audio gets recorded with each microphone indepdendantly of each other, and then the whole thing gets remixed at a studio. The mixing can be done at the Ripe Audio studio, or if you have a home studio- you can mix it yourself. Truely this turns a live event into a studio session. Since these recordings can be made at a live performance; their premium audio quality allows them to easily become a "Live Album".

Another option is to record a copy of the outputs directly from the soundboard. This is nice and fast - a CD will be ready shortly after the event - but will rely on the live mix for volumes, EQ, and processing.

Finally, a third way is as easy as an audience recording .. a microphone goes up in the audience and that's it. After the event it takes a few minutes to burn a CD. It's a higher-tech (but analogous) concept to the old Grateful Dead bootlegs.

All of these methods are 100% mobile.

This will accomodate recording at an event, out in the field, or in a traditional studio setting. No matter where you are, Ripe Audio can capture it with detail and quality.

 

You can hear examples of these recording styles at the Samples page.