Building a portable recording rig for bands and live sessions
How many times after a show have you thought: > "If we had recorded tonight, we’d already have half a live record." > "That rehearsal take was magic, but we di...
How many times after a show have you thought:
"If we had recorded tonight, we’d already have half a live record." "That rehearsal take was magic, but we didn’t capture it…"
Building a portable recording rig is exactly about this: having a small "mobile studio" you can take to the rehearsal room, venues or special locations to record live sessions, without rebuilding a full control room every time.
In this guide we’ll cover:
- how to define what your rig is really for (demos, live records, social content, streaming);
- the essential pieces: interface/recorder, mics, DIs, headphones;
- how to think about stage layout, cabling and power in a portable way;
- a practical checklist so you don’t forget anything on show night.
To see what’s actually out there (including used gear), you can start with:
- audio interfaces
- portable multitrack / field recorders
- dynamic mics for vocals and kick
- condenser mics for overheads and rooms
- DI boxes and reamp boxes
- closed‑back headphones and monitoring
1. First step: what do you actually want this rig to do?
Before buying anything, be honest:
- Do you want to record serious demos for singles or EPs?
- Do you want to document live shows (even just to listen back and improve)?
- Do you want to produce live session videos for YouTube/Instagram?
- Do you want to run streams from rehearsals or gigs?
Each goal needs a slightly different balance of:
- channel count;
- mic selection;
- degree of portability.
For most bands, a rig that can handle 8–12 inputs is the sweet spot.
2. The core: interface or field recorder?
Two main routes.
2.1 Audio interface + laptop
Pros:
- maximum flexibility (plugins, editing straight in your DAW);
- you can reuse the setup in your home studio;
- easy integration of click, cue mixes and backing tracks.
Cons:
- the laptop is a critical point (crashes, updates, power issues);
- more cables, more complexity.
For a standard band you’ll usually want at least an 8‑in / 8‑out interface (often with ADAT to expand), for example among the:
2.2 Stand‑alone field / mixer‑recorder
Pros:
- records to SD card, no computer needed;
- often more robust in live environments;
- some models can also act as front of house mixers.
Cons:
- you’ll still need to edit in a DAW afterwards;
- slightly less flexible on the spot than a laptop‑based setup.
If your priority is to hit REC and forget about it, a solid multitrack recorder is the most stress‑free option.
3. How many tracks does a band really need?
It depends on your lineup, but a typical layout might be:
- Drums: 4–6 channels (kick, snare, overhead L/R, maybe stereo toms or room);
- Bass: 1–2 channels (DI + mic on cab);
- Guitar 1: 1 channel (mic on cab or DI from modeler);
- Guitar 2 / Keys: 1–2 channels (stereo DI if needed);
- Lead vocal: 1 channel;
- Backing vocals: 1–2 channels.
Total: from 8 up to 12 tracks.
If you’re a small band (trio) and are fine with a more minimal drum sound, you can work with 6 well‑planned channels.
4. Mics and DIs: what to bring and what to take from the stage
4.1 Drums
If space (and budget) is limited:
- kick (dedicated dynamic);
- snare (dynamic like an SM57);
- stereo overheads (small‑diaphragm condensers);
With this you already have:
- punchy kick;
- body and attack on snare;
- stereo image of the kit.
4.2 Bass
Ideal combo:
- clean DI (controlled and mix‑friendly);
- dynamic mic on the cab if time and space allow.
If you must choose one: a good DI wins.
4.3 Guitars and keys
- Amped guitars: dynamic mic on the cab;
- Modelers / profilers: line / XLR outs into the recorder;
- Keys: always via DI or stereo line.
4.4 Vocals
Use vocal dynamics you trust, ideally with good rejection.
You can find many suitable options by searching:
5. Monitoring, headphones and click management
A portable rig isn’t just about recording: it can also be the base for in‑ear and click.
Key pieces:
- a small headphone amp (even 4‑channel) or in‑ear system;
- routing from the recorder/interface to the band’s headphones;
- if you use click, keep it on a separate track (not in the main mix) so it doesn’t end up on mics.
Many recorders and interfaces can create separate cue mixes: click only for those who need it, more musical mixes for everyone else.
6. Real portability: cabling, power, cases
Not glamorous, but crucial.
6.1 Cables
Prepare a dedicated kit:
- numbered XLRs;
- a couple of spare DIs;
- power extensions;
- more jack leads than you think you’ll need.
6.2 Power
- power strips with switch and protection;
- a small power conditioner / UPS if you often play sketchy venues;
- clearly labelled PSUs (what powers what).
6.3 Transport
Put everything into:
- a short rack (for interface / power / splitter);
- or a padded case/backpack for lighter rigs.
Goal: the rig should be something you can:
- drop into place;
- plug into stage and power;
- have ready to go in a few minutes.
7. A typical workflow for a live session
- Arrive, set up drums and backline.
- Place mics according to your plan (a simple sketch helps a lot).
- Plug all channels into the recorder/interface.
- Run a full‑song soundcheck.
- Listen back in headphones: noise, clipping, balance.
- Adjust preamp gains on the recorder, not just at front of house.
- Hit REC and touch nothing unless strictly necessary.
Back home you’ll import the tracks into your DAW, with all the advantages of multitrack.
8. Quick checklist before leaving home
- [ ] Recorder / interface + laptop (if used) + PSUs;
- [ ] formatted, empty SD cards;
- [ ] drum, vocal and extra mics;
- [ ] DI boxes;
- [ ] XLR and jack cables + adapters;
- [ ] enough mic stands;
- [ ] at least one pair of closed‑back headphones for the rig operator;
- [ ] power strips and extensions;
- [ ] gaffer tape, labels, markers.
Anything you don’t prepare at home will cost you minutes (and stress) at the venue.
FAQ – Portable recording rigs for bands and live sessions
Do I really need a laptop, or is a field recorder enough?
It depends on how much editing and flexibility you want on location. For many live situations a solid multitrack recorder is enough; you can edit later in the studio.
How many tracks do I actually need for a decent band recording?
With 8 well‑used tracks you can already do a lot. 12 give you extra room for ambience, extra vocals and stereo sources. Below 6 tracks everything becomes more of a compromise.
Is it better to mic everything or just grab lines from the mixer?
Ideally you combine both. DI for line sources (bass, keys, modelers), mics on drums and vocals. Recording only the main mix from the desk limits what you can do in post.
How do I avoid clipping in loud live situations?
Set preamp gains conservatively, leave plenty of headroom and record at 24‑bit. It’s much safer to lift levels in the mix than to ruin a take with digital clipping.
Can I use the same rig for rehearsals, gigs and video sessions?
Yes – that’s one of the main reasons to invest in a mobile rig. As long as it’s portable, robust and well thought out, you can use it in the rehearsal room, on stage and on video shoots.
Products related
Digidesign
DigiDesign Digi002 Console Interfaccia Audio/Controller SPEDITO GRATIS€229.00
Sold in:
Italy
Universal Audio
Universal Audio Volt 176 USB - Scheda Audio Desktop USB 1-In/2-Out SPEDITO GRATIS€166.00
Sold in:
Italy
M-Audio
M-Audio BX3 BT (coppia) - Coppia Di Speaker Bluetooth 3.5" 120W SPEDITO GRATIS€115.00
Sold in:
Italy
Audient
Audient iD24 - Interfaccia Audio 10 In / 14 Out Con 2 Preamp Microfonici SPEDITO GRATIS€319.00
Sold in:
Italy
Shure
Shure SE425 Cl - Auricolari Ad Isolamento Acustico Trasparenti SPEDITO GRATIS€275.00
Sold in:
Italy
Articles Related