S
Simon D.
New member
Hello all. My first post here...am from Nova Scotia, Canada, and do some recording just for fun. I'm in my forties, and I've been playing guitar for about 5years now, mostly acoustic fingerstyle. Am trying my hand at singing, but it's coming along slowly...
I'm looking for some advice on my next purchase for my home recording setup, which I've been slowly building a piece at a time over the last 2 years. I'm a hobbyist only, and a newbie at recording, and I'm looking to spend a couple hundred (or more if needed, I just don't want to start buying things before I start knowing what I'm doing) on upgrades and looking for suggestions where I can improve my setup the most. My 17 yr old son also plays acoustic, and sings...so my rig is mostly for acoustic guitar and vocals. Eventually, I'd like to add a bit of percussion (drums, shakers, tambourine, etc). It's all for fun, so no record deals lurking here.
Here's what I have collected so far:
- I have a PC, 2.8 ghz dual core Intel, no firewire, with 2 GB RAM (noisy with lots of fans because we play video games on it and we have a high-end video card that needs to be cooled)
- I'm running Audacity on it, downloaded for free. I can do a bit of cutting and pasting, add some verb, some EQ, splice a track or two, but that's about it.
- M-Audio Fast Track Pro
- Alesis M1 Active 520 monitors (paid $300 Canadian for the pair maybe?...forget)
- A cheapish pair of headphones (Sony MDR-XD100...$50 bucks?)
- I have a Shure SM 58 Dynamic Mic
- I have a Apex 435 large diaphram Condenser Mic ($70?)
- mic stand, cables, etc. (don't own a pop filter)
- cheap electric guitar and Roland Cube amp
- a v-Amp effects pedal for guitar
- several acoustic guitars (2 Seagulls, Big Baby Taylor, Taylor 414ce, etc)
- I record in a 20x15 basement room with no acoustic treatment or sheilded areas. Has drop ceilings and carpet floor.
So, if I want to improve my setup to record mostly acoustic and vocals, where should I spend a few disposable ($200-$300) dollars?
Here's what's on my mind:
- Interface upgrade: Would upgrading my Fast Track Pro to a better model improve recording quality and input levels? I don't need more than 2 inputs, and don't have firewire (can you install Firewire on an existing PC?). Since some interfaces come with software, should I get a new interface and get the software as a freebie?
- Pre-amp: My gain on my Fast Track Pro needs to be cranked wide open when recording sometimes (because the signal from the mic is weak?). Should I buy a seperate pre-amp for it? Will it improve the quality of the recording beacuse I won't need to crank it wide open?
- another mic: Instead of buying a pre-amp, should I get a better mic? Will a better mic remove the need to crank the gain wide-open and hence ditch the need for a preamp? I can buy a used Rode NT1-A large diaphram condenser locally for about $150. Or, since I have a large diaphram already (albeit low quality), should I spend the money on a small-diaphram to record the acoustic guitar (I've read that the small-dia may be better than the large for this?)
- Headphones: Since my monitors are beginner quality and my headphones cheap, should I get a better set of headphones ($150-200) for mixing, etc?
- Acoustic treatment: What about acoustic treatments for the room? Foam for the walls or building or buying a small booth in a corner of the room?
- Software: Should I spend my money on better software? (I can buy Pro Tools m-powered 7.4 locally for $100 bucks) Will the quality of recording improve, or will I just have better features like plug-ins and effects?
Any other ideas?
Thanks a million.
Simon
I'm looking for some advice on my next purchase for my home recording setup, which I've been slowly building a piece at a time over the last 2 years. I'm a hobbyist only, and a newbie at recording, and I'm looking to spend a couple hundred (or more if needed, I just don't want to start buying things before I start knowing what I'm doing) on upgrades and looking for suggestions where I can improve my setup the most. My 17 yr old son also plays acoustic, and sings...so my rig is mostly for acoustic guitar and vocals. Eventually, I'd like to add a bit of percussion (drums, shakers, tambourine, etc). It's all for fun, so no record deals lurking here.
Here's what I have collected so far:
- I have a PC, 2.8 ghz dual core Intel, no firewire, with 2 GB RAM (noisy with lots of fans because we play video games on it and we have a high-end video card that needs to be cooled)
- I'm running Audacity on it, downloaded for free. I can do a bit of cutting and pasting, add some verb, some EQ, splice a track or two, but that's about it.
- M-Audio Fast Track Pro
- Alesis M1 Active 520 monitors (paid $300 Canadian for the pair maybe?...forget)
- A cheapish pair of headphones (Sony MDR-XD100...$50 bucks?)
- I have a Shure SM 58 Dynamic Mic
- I have a Apex 435 large diaphram Condenser Mic ($70?)
- mic stand, cables, etc. (don't own a pop filter)
- cheap electric guitar and Roland Cube amp
- a v-Amp effects pedal for guitar
- several acoustic guitars (2 Seagulls, Big Baby Taylor, Taylor 414ce, etc)
- I record in a 20x15 basement room with no acoustic treatment or sheilded areas. Has drop ceilings and carpet floor.
So, if I want to improve my setup to record mostly acoustic and vocals, where should I spend a few disposable ($200-$300) dollars?
Here's what's on my mind:
- Interface upgrade: Would upgrading my Fast Track Pro to a better model improve recording quality and input levels? I don't need more than 2 inputs, and don't have firewire (can you install Firewire on an existing PC?). Since some interfaces come with software, should I get a new interface and get the software as a freebie?
- Pre-amp: My gain on my Fast Track Pro needs to be cranked wide open when recording sometimes (because the signal from the mic is weak?). Should I buy a seperate pre-amp for it? Will it improve the quality of the recording beacuse I won't need to crank it wide open?
- another mic: Instead of buying a pre-amp, should I get a better mic? Will a better mic remove the need to crank the gain wide-open and hence ditch the need for a preamp? I can buy a used Rode NT1-A large diaphram condenser locally for about $150. Or, since I have a large diaphram already (albeit low quality), should I spend the money on a small-diaphram to record the acoustic guitar (I've read that the small-dia may be better than the large for this?)
- Headphones: Since my monitors are beginner quality and my headphones cheap, should I get a better set of headphones ($150-200) for mixing, etc?
- Acoustic treatment: What about acoustic treatments for the room? Foam for the walls or building or buying a small booth in a corner of the room?
- Software: Should I spend my money on better software? (I can buy Pro Tools m-powered 7.4 locally for $100 bucks) Will the quality of recording improve, or will I just have better features like plug-ins and effects?
Any other ideas?
Thanks a million.
Simon