I have to agree with Glen…over the years I’ve read the same noob questions over and over and over on different forums (I was a noob once too, many years ago) and there is a certain level of frustration on both the noob side and on the side of the pros trying to help.
First off, when a noob begins a question with comments like
“something cheap” or
“not looking to do serious recordings” or
“it’s just for fun”…etc, etc, etc...but then ends the sentence by saying he wants
“good quality” or to
“have it sound pro quality” or asks how to
“get that better vocal/instrument sound”….
…often it’s pretty much a contradiction right from the git-go!
That’s like assuming that there are two ways to get the same great recordings…“cheap-n-half-assed” or “expensive-n-involved”, and that the pros just prefer to go the more difficult/expensive way because they are masochists…and now they want to be mean to the noobs and make them suffer too!
I think the majority of times, the main reason noobs are so skeptical and reluctant to many pro suggestions is…MONEY…or lack of it.
Yeah, when all you have is $100 to spend on a preamp, it’s very EASY to talk yourself into believing that it sounds really good, or when you have little or no understanding of good recording techniques, it’s very EASY to look for the line of least resistance and convince yourself that your naïve, noob approach will yield the same results.
What some noobs don’t seem to understand is that the more experienced guys have a reason for saying what they say. It’s not about making you jump through hoops and making your recording experience unpleasant…rather, it’s about teaching you the *correct* way to do things…and YEAH…it can be a drawn out process at times, and yeah, it can cost some serious $$$ to get past the point of *so-so sound* (even if you are just doing it for fun).
But that whole Q&A process can be especially frustrating when some noob is chompin-at-the-bit to lay down some tracks, even though he has ZERO experience in how to go about doing it and little or wrong gear to do it with and no $$$ to improve it. He just wants a fast/cheap solution and any other answers he gets are often met with surprise, bewilderment and most of all…denial!
I usually try to help noobs as much as possible, and will try and give the most detailed answers that I can…but I’ve learned that when someone is in deep denial, the best approach is to just let them hit their head against the wall until it hurts enough for them to stop…and eventually, they will learn through trial and error.
I think for some folks…that is the “best” way for them...sometimes you just have to find out the hard way before you can believe.
I know...I lived in denail about a lot of stuff in the beginning...I still have some bumps where I hit my head back in the day!