Recording In Houses Of Worship
Quality recordings of church events depends upon attention to every detail.
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If we were to conduct a poll regarding audio recording among churches, I think we would find that a large percentage of churches record their services.

The reasons vary: some churches may simply want to archive their weekly sermons, while others may make available recorded copies of their services on CD, tape, or some other recordable medium.

Some churches may even go beyond the simple duplication of their service and offer their programs on radio, television, and even Internet-based broadcasts.

Regardless of the “why” regarding church service recording, audio teams should always strive for excellence.

In 2 Timothy 2:15 it’s written:

“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth.”

This scripture passage obviously exhorts us to handle God’s word correctly and, in this article, we’re going to discuss some techniques on how to record the word of truth with excellence.

Past Podcast Experiences
Over the course of many years, I have had the privilege of producing service recordings for weekly broadcast for two different churches.

Both pastors were gifted speakers and their sermons deserved to be faithfully reproduced with excellence.

One church provided my studio with professionally recorded multi-tracked source material. The other church provided me with a stereo mixed CD recorded directly from the FOH console.

While both services had to be edited, remixed, and mastered, both programs didn’t sound the same from a quality standpoint.

This fact wasn’t necessarily a result of one service being multi-tracked and the other being recorded to CD, but instead, the difference in the final product was a direct result of the source audio.

The source audio from one church was excellent and the other church’s audio signal was beset with technical problems.


Source: Church Production

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Comments (2) Most recent displayed first
Posted by kegelove vezbe  on  01/15/12  at  11:59 AM
Excellent post. I want to thank you for this informative read. Keep up your great work. kegelove vezbe
Posted by David Geipel  on  01/05/09  at  08:18 PM
Hi Scott-

Great article. Wanted to know what you used for matersing your final mix? We find that the worship team mix on the final cd always sounds worse than how it did in the house. Cant seem to get it right and wanted to know if soom software would help with this better than the analog board. Our board is set up to have one half for the house sound and the other half for the final mastered copy. We produce them live - meaning we send it from the board to a CD for final reproduction while people wait for their CD to be duplicated. Any help on how to better mix down the worship team would be helpful.

Blessings,

Dave

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