Any #tips on a good #recording #setup in a #rehearsalroom / #bandpracticeroom?

What's like a basic, okay'ish set of #mics, #recordinginterface, #mixer, #diboxes or how do you #record your live #demos?

Sry, I've forgot to mention that we're a five-member rock/post-punk band consisting of a drummer, two guitarists (incl. one singing backing vocals), one keyboard/synth player (also backing vocals) and me (playing bass and singing).
One guitarist plays over a Kemper plugged into the p. a., the keyboarder also plays over the p.a.. I play my bass over a stack of an amp and two speakers (a 4x10 and 1x15) and the other guitarist is playing over a multi FX pedal and a combo.

@diskonformist

I would leave out the mixer, use an interface with enough channels, mix in the DAW (Reaper is a good, inexpensive choice: https://www.reaper.fm/). You would also need two active studio monitors.

REAPER | Audio Production Without Limits

@diskonformist When I had the space, I used a digital mixer and recorded all the raw channels into Logic (any DAW will do).

Mics…
Spend about $100 per mic. Anything less is usually crap. Anything more is usually a waste.
Mixer…
I used the Behringer X32 stuff, because it has a nice accessory ecosystem.
Sound absorption panels…
If there will be live drums, put a cloud over them, and panels behind them. As many panels as you can manage. Build big corner bass traps. #recording