Hey all!
I got a rather nifty christmas present in the form of a new, much better job. It means I will finally be able to start working myself out of debt, but also be able to finally afford some decent recording gear (w00000000t!).
With that in mind, I need some advice...
Please listen carefully to the songs on my band's facebook page here (for some reason music player is tiny and near the bottom left of the page, meh...):
Bane of Deceit Facebook
I recorded all guitars, vocals and programmed all the drums. So here's what I used to record this:
Line 6 Pod XT
NJ series BC Rich
really cheap Harley Benton bass from Thomann
Mic: ADK A51
Vocal compressor: Behringer MDX2800 (which I have since found out from people is really crap and a waste of money, meh)
Peavy PV6 mixer (needed it for the Phantom power for my Mic)
Novation Speedio soundcard
Cubase SX3
Groove Agent (but have since procured a copy of Superior Drummer which I will now be using instead.)
My music computer went boom the other day, thankfully the HDD is still intact, but I am replacing the CPU, mobo and ram, as the computer is well over 10 years old and should probably be updated anyway.
So I want to update whatever I can to make my sound a lot more professional, but within reason (e.g not tens of thousands of quid worth of gear. My new job is good, but not THAT good, heh.)
I am already planning to get a custom guitar at some point, and probably a Fractal Audio AxeFX, but what I'd really like to do after that is get my hands on some decent vocal recording gear so I need advice on that. Ideally I'd like an SM7b, but that might be pushing the budget a bit far.
Please, any recommendations on what new gear to get, what better compression to use (a lot of people say software compressors?) and any techniques to "fill out" my sound so that it doesn't sound so thin and weak.
EPIC first post and request, hehe, but I really am trying to go much bigger and much more pro with my sound this year, so I can finally post things up on the web without having to apologise for the quality of the recordings.
Thanks in advance for any advice. Consider me your new pet project.
I got a rather nifty christmas present in the form of a new, much better job. It means I will finally be able to start working myself out of debt, but also be able to finally afford some decent recording gear (w00000000t!).
With that in mind, I need some advice...
Please listen carefully to the songs on my band's facebook page here (for some reason music player is tiny and near the bottom left of the page, meh...):
Bane of Deceit Facebook
I recorded all guitars, vocals and programmed all the drums. So here's what I used to record this:
Line 6 Pod XT
NJ series BC Rich
really cheap Harley Benton bass from Thomann
Mic: ADK A51
Vocal compressor: Behringer MDX2800 (which I have since found out from people is really crap and a waste of money, meh)
Peavy PV6 mixer (needed it for the Phantom power for my Mic)
Novation Speedio soundcard
Cubase SX3
Groove Agent (but have since procured a copy of Superior Drummer which I will now be using instead.)
My music computer went boom the other day, thankfully the HDD is still intact, but I am replacing the CPU, mobo and ram, as the computer is well over 10 years old and should probably be updated anyway.
So I want to update whatever I can to make my sound a lot more professional, but within reason (e.g not tens of thousands of quid worth of gear. My new job is good, but not THAT good, heh.)
I am already planning to get a custom guitar at some point, and probably a Fractal Audio AxeFX, but what I'd really like to do after that is get my hands on some decent vocal recording gear so I need advice on that. Ideally I'd like an SM7b, but that might be pushing the budget a bit far.
Please, any recommendations on what new gear to get, what better compression to use (a lot of people say software compressors?) and any techniques to "fill out" my sound so that it doesn't sound so thin and weak.
EPIC first post and request, hehe, but I really am trying to go much bigger and much more pro with my sound this year, so I can finally post things up on the web without having to apologise for the quality of the recordings.
Thanks in advance for any advice. Consider me your new pet project.