Will this work???

  • Thread starter Thread starter thearcticwombat
  • Start date Start date
T

thearcticwombat

New member
I do not know anything about recording, but I have a macbook, and i recorded my drums once on garage band with a microphone plugged in to it and the quality was sooo good it sounded like a pro lol.

Anyway, what I need to know is if i buy two microphones with 6.5mm leads, and get a Y splitter (2x 6.5mm to 3.5mm) will garageband record with both of the mics??
and will the quality be as good and stuff like that???

thanks peeps!!!
 
If it sounded pro, why go to two mics? Sounds like you already have it down.
 
I do not know anything about recording, but I have a macbook, and i recorded my drums once on garage band with a microphone plugged in to it and the quality was sooo good it sounded like a pro lol.

Anyway, what I need to know is if i buy two microphones with 6.5mm leads, and get a Y splitter (2x 6.5mm to 3.5mm) will garageband record with both of the mics??
and will the quality be as good and stuff like that???

thanks peeps!!!

It won't work. Each mic needs it's own signal path. If any signal manages get through, it will sound like crap.
 
thanks man!

ok, well what do I need for it not to sound like crap lol? and how much will it cost???
 
ok, well what do I need for it not to sound like crap lol? and how much will it cost???

A Mac compatible interface with at least 2 mic inputs. Prices and quality are all over the map. Do some research and make a decision as to what to purchase. BTW - regardless of you initial impression, mics with 3.5" mini plugs aren't going to cut it for very long.
 
ok, well what do I need for it not to sound like crap lol? and how much will it cost???

Could be $500, could be $50,000. Seriously. It varies that much.

You could probably buy a Firepod and a couple of SM57's and make it work okay...it all depends on what "good" means to you.

Frank
 
i saw the video and you're a good drummer, if you get a sound card, a pair of overhead mics and the other mic you have to capture the kick or maybe even leave it in the postion it was in the video i garuantee you'll be in another dimension as to how your kit sounds.

save up you pennies for a sound card with multiple inputs and the best OH's you can afford. trust me. ;)
 
um im real sorry but i really am an actualy noob at this lol

can you give me some examples of these soundcards that you can get please?

btw i have about £70 saved up which is about $150, so could i afford one for this?
thank you so much ppl!!! :DD
 
well the truth is you're probably gonna have to spend a bit more than that to get a good sound. as far as recommendations go budget equipment will only get you started on your trek up the mountain. just google xlr input sound cards and small diaphram condenser mics and read up on some reviews and get whatever you can afford that has some decent reviews. if you're gonna record drums the more inputs the better, but more inputs means more expensive.

buying budget equipment will only give experience and not necessary a great sound. you'll get good sound though, and you'll learn loads once you have some equipment to mess around with. but from what i can tell you're young and whatever experience is good experience, eventually if you do forge on and get more involved in recording you'll buy better equipment.
 
£70 saved up which is about $150
That's very optimistic :D More like $100 nowadays?

Yea, as greyharmonix said £70 won't buy you a lot. You could probably just about pick up a second hand entry-level soundcard (M-audio Delta, etc), but on top of that you still need mics and preamps. You might also grow out of that soundcard quite quickly, so you might be better off saving a bit longer so you have more to spend.

In terms of mics... while some people swear by using just a pair of overheads on a kit, I tend to work with a minimum setup of 4 mics (OHs, kick, snare) working up to sometimes 8 or 10 depending on the genre - obviously jazz drums need a completely different representation of the kit than an unnatural close-mic'd metal sound :)

I'd recommend waiting for a while then buying something like a M-audio Fast Track Ultra which would give you 4 mic inputs, plenty to get you going multitrack recording. You could also see if any of the 8-input offerings like the Presonus Firepod (FP-10) or Motu 8pre are going cheap on ebay. Then you need mics, cables, stands, software. It all mounts up.
 
Last edited:
Audio Technica Pro37

thearcticwombat,

I like my AT Pro37s for drum overheads. Add an ATM 25 kick mic and you've got you start. Used under $100 each if you shop around.

Of course sooner or later you'll get an SM57. Put it on snare.

Does your computer have a PCI slot. I like the M-Audio PCI interfaces so much I'm trying to buy one. Really haven't used one yet but I've heard all good about them and they are used for about $100.

Thanks,

Hairy Larry
 
Line6 UX2 has 2 preamps built in...and all you have to do is have an USB slot...$200 us
 
Does your computer have a PCI slot. I like the M-Audio PCI interfaces so much I'm trying to buy one. Really haven't used one yet but I've heard all good about them and they are used for about $100.

The OP specified a MacBook, which is a laptop, so no, it is safe to say that it doesn't have PCI. :)

That said, although M-Audio's PCI cards were great for their time, they aren't particularly good these days. The difference in sound quality between my old 1010LT and any of my FireWire interfaces was like night and day. The sound from the newer interfaces is dramatically clearer, cleaner, more accurate, less noisy, etc. It's like a fog has been lifted when you hear the difference. That's the only way I can describe it....

The Delta boards were groundbreaking in that they were among the first prosumer cards designed for recording. They came out at a price point under a grand in the late 1990s when the hardware involved would normally be many thousands of dollars.

Since then, economies of scale have drastically driven down the cost of quality components to such a degree that even the cheapest FireWire interfaces today produce recordings that sound far clearer than even M-Audio's most expensive PCI interface, the Delta 1010 (which has a long history of capacitor failures, just to add insult to injury).

Save yourself a lot of headaches and a lot of poor quality recordings and skip directly to a more modern interface with more modern converters. Technology has come a long way in a decade, and the M-Audio PCI hardware is basically a decade-old design at this point.
 
Back
Top