How to Record Sermons for Your Church

From David Spencer's Media Spin : Observations about media in Canada
Jump to: navigation, search
Flagcanadamini.gif Today is Tuesday March 19, 2024 in Canada. Flagcanadamini.gif
This is the day that the Lord has made; we will rejoice and be glad in it. (Psalm 118:24)

David Spencer's Media Spin Canada provides information on:

  1. associations in media, a glossary, music, Media new media, photography, publishing, radio, television, video and Resources web resources.
  2. David M.R.D. Spencer's founding and work with ChristianMedia.ca between 1999 to 2008. Read the interview with David .
  3. To connect with Canadian Christians working and volunteering in arts, media and music, publishing and writing go here .



< Home Flagcanadamini.gif | Associations | Categories | Glossary | Media Workers | New | Popular | Search

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z



How to Record Sermons for Your Church

  • Recording Sermons by Simon Job
  • Our pastor wears a wireless, head mic, which improves pick-up and eliminates accidental poking and clothes scratching against it. We have a limiter to keep the sound fairly level. We record directly into a Sony CD burner. I'm not really up on the hardware, other than basic operation when I sometimes have to record the CD.
    I take the CD home and use GoldWave to rip it and save it as a WAV file, which I edit with CoolEdit (bought out by Adobe) and convert to RealMedia & Windows Media using their free compilers. From the time I get home until the files are on site is around 30 minutes, depending on editing time.
  • Sound-system wise, basically our pastors generally use lapel mics (shure ucx series) for 2 or our 3 services. They come through the normal receiver and mixer to our dual tape deck. We do one tape of the whole service and one of just the sermon. (do both for each service). The sermon-only tapes are necessary because the whole-service tape often switches to side B during a sermon, making us lose a minute in the middle.
    I take the tape home, play it from a boombox into my PC's audio card line-in, recording with a copy of Soundforge Studio (not the $600 one, but a cheaper/limited version). I edit with that and/or with Goldwave, save a copy as .wav, then convert to .mp3. Use 2 utils to get the ID tags as I want, then upload to the webserver and link it in.
    At that point our transcription company folk transcribe the sermon from the MP3 and send me a .doc file. Volunteers proof-read it, then I post it.
    I have a fair amount more discussion on all this in our webminfaq, so check there if you are interested in this topic. Hope it's helpful.

http://www.centralpc.org/admin/webminfaq.htm#create_audio http://www.centralpc.org/admin/webminfaq.htm#create_transcripts http://www.centralpc.org/admin/webminfaq.htm#sermons http://www.centralpc.org/admin/webminfaq.htm#trans_audio