
- #TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND UPGRADE#
- #TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND PRO#
- #TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND SOFTWARE#
#TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND PRO#
When I refer to Buss, replace with Aux Track if you are using Pro Tools. NB: I use Logic Pro but this will apply to any DAW. Here’s my Step by Step Guide to recording remotely All the other plugins I’m using are free.
#TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND UPGRADE#
Teamviewer runs OK for about four hours on the free version, but the upgrade is cheap if using professionally. And the only cost is for the Audiomovers plugin ($99.99 per annum). It’s as close to being in the studio with an artist as it will get for the moment. This method has been seamless for me, virtually no lag or delay and no crashes. Use a talkback system from your laptop directly to the artist’s headphones, that cuts when you hit play or record on the remote DAW.Īdjust the artist’s headphone mix and even turn their speakers on and off in their room to listen to tracks. Stream the audio from that remote DAW (including the live mic) back to yourself. Operate a DAW (eg: Logic, Protools) on an artist’s computer remotely and record vocals/instruments.

#TEAMVIEWER REMOTE CONTROL SOUND SOFTWARE#
I have combined a few free and cheap software packages to enable this easily.

I have worked out a scenario that has been working for me in the past few weeks, and I wanted to share it in the hope that there might be something here that is useful for you too. With artists unable to travel let alone be in the same room as me, I was determined to figure out a way to keep working and making records.

When the lockdowns were announced in March, as for many of us, my work was in danger of drying up. I have spent most of my working life holed up in small rooms with the same bunch of people day in, day out, staring at screens and wondering when the tea will run out.įrom my studio in a repurposed German communications bunker as a teenager to the Fallout Shelter at Island Records where I worked in my twenties, and the countless tour buses I’ve been lucky enough to travel the world in - give me four walls, some talented people and a good pair of speakers and I am generally very content. Like a lot of recording studio professionals, I am quite used to the idea of staying in one place for long periods of time. It’s relatively simple, works in any DAW and well worth investigating. Producer Tim Bran, who has been creating music remotely for many years, has devised a workflow for remote recording using a combination of software from Audiomovers, Teamviewer, Sound Radix, Zoom and Skype.
