B
Bob's Mods
New member
I began thinking I could make pro sounding recordings. I have a very basic set up. Korg Karma work station, pre amp, in mixer, out mixer, condenser mic, Cubase LE and 24/ 96 sound card. I've listened to different types of music over a long period of time. Up until the mid 90's or so, pro records weren't that high of quality. The quality of recording has to do with what you're trying to record and how much time you want to put into it. It also has to do with the signal before it hits the DAW or whatever you're recording with. While it may not be possible to completely get that sparkling studio sound, I'm finding if you put enough patience and care into mixing and experimenting, you can get decently close. If I can do it with my little ghetto rig, I'm sure with some higher quality mics and pre amps, I could come even closer. I'd say the most important thing to good recording is having the ear for music. I'm no expert though. I'm just a beginner.
While I don't have a very nice set up, the actual instruments I use are pretty nice. Aside from the Korg, I record with an Ibanez RG 7 string, ESP (not LTD) Viper, Yamaha 5 string Bass, Rogue acoustic (hey it sounds nice), and old Boogie head with a JCM 800 cab.
I agree. Yes I find home recorded stuff lacks the sparkle of the best commercial recordings no matter how hard I try to recreate that, it is spending some time tweaking your mix that gets you close to some really good commercial recordings. I find that working with the bass track and vocals takes the most time and care to get them to fit right in the pocket. Bass is especially time consuming.
The quality of your gear, the quality of your plugs and your ability to use them along with your ears and mixing ability plus a dash of patience and going over your work mulitple times are key. There are no shortcuts. Unlike a well decked out studio with very experienced techs who have learned to work fast with the best gear, we, at home have to take a longer amount of time and fuss with our mixes more to get them to fit in the pocket. This formula seems to work for me.