S
SubYeoman
New member
Good deal, Subman. Your next questions should along the lines of monitoring systems and room treatment. have you got those things taken care of yet??? Most important part of a studio, ya know!!
peace,
Actually, I hadn't planned on doing anything in the way of room treatment or monitoring... I was going to record exclusively direct to PC, through headphones. Is that bad?
My situation is:
1. I live in a townhouse apartment so I can't be too loud
2. My music equipment doesn't use any amps or mics (except for my SM58 for vocals, which is probably my last priority)
3. My recording setup is in my basement which is quite large, has concrete walls, and doubles as a laundry room and workout area (gym) i.e., horrible acoustics even if I was to put effort into trying to make it better
I have a set of electronic drums, An acoustic-electric guitar, a Yamaha P-85 digital piano, the SM58 mic, and an electric guitar via the Digitech RP255 pedal, all going directly into the USB interface, which I monitor through a pair of Ultrasone 550 Headphones. I record drums and Acoustic clean, and the piano is either clean or MIDI so I didn't see the point of amping and micing them. As for the electric guitar, the main reason I bought the guitar pedal was because it has a built-in equalizer and it also emulates various amps, stacks, effects pedals, etc., so I figured that any benefit I could get from an amp I could get from this pedal. I know the quality isn't going to be the same, but in my situation I figured this was the way to go. As for my vocal mic... well, I figured I'd just have to put up with whatever I got there. This experience is mainly about getting better at playing and recording music, and vocals are more of an afterthought anyway.
As you know, I am very new to all of this, so if this setup is way off base, or I'm missing something please set me straight!