DISCLAIMER: The following may sound harsh but I mean well and I only wish you the best of luck!
c7sus said:
I think you should go back to your employer and beg him to re-hire you.
Truer words may never have been spoken. Man, I don't know what kind of bread you were makin' but this stuff gets expensive fast and unless you are the next [insert now rich and famous prodigy musician] you are not going to be making ANY money off of it for a damn long time. For real. Get used to it.
You come on this BBS with weird and uneducated questions saying that you quit your job to make and record music. Well thats all fine and good, but probably the best advice I can give you right now is "don't quit your day job." There's a reason that became a catch phrase and that reason is you. Even the people that "make it" have (in most cases anyway) worked
extremely hard to get there.
In nine days you've racked up enough posts to become a "senior member" but show me another senior member who has so little to add to the community. And I don't really care about that, but at least listen to the guys like c7sus, H2H, tubedude, and Gidge that have been around a lot longer than me and
DO contribute to community.
I want to emphasize what c7sus is telling you. If you could book some time in a small studio, or even just ask the engineer if you could sit in a few sessions just to watch what goes on, you'd probably walk away with experience more valuable than some piece of gear.
Also, he's right again, you're gonna be digging though the gray area to find your answers. And the best answers will come from what you learn on your own. That's why I recommended to you in another thread that you just get an extremely basic setup, like an SM57, an ART Tube MP, a decent sound card (even an SB Live is surprisingly decent), and some software (can even be free stuff, like PTFree). Once you have all of the above, just use it, learn it, and then use it again, and learn it better. Once you really know how you use this gear you will have realized its limitations so you'll know what else you'll need, and you'll be able to do justice to some better gear.
And please keep your day job.
