G
Goldcan
New member
A new car for my wife, a home studio for me
I've been reading the forums on here, sayers, and gearslutz for a few months, there's so much info floating out there. I've played bass for a few years now and have found myself getting caught up in the aspects of recording for my band more than I like playing with them (which they're fine with cause my musical tastes (alt rock) are different than theirs (country rockish)), so I've changed my focus and am trying to better recording for them and other bands, we've been using some very DIY stuff to record with and I'm kinda sick of it.
I have 20k to convert the shop/garage of the house into a studio and purchase all the gear I can to get it up and running. Spending spree yahhh!
No.
Before I spend a damn dime, I need some books, some advice, and maybe some hands on training. Like I've said I've been reading the forums, but they're geared a lot towards people who know what the hell is going on or on the track to it.
I'd like to know what books are good, from mics to mixers, studio design, things like that, but they have to be dumbed down, if I'm reading them with no hands on, specs don't do shit for me. Once I can get my hands on some gear and mess with it, then books with specs and math will be benificial to me, but until then I'm of the school that "read all you want, memorize the figures and math... but until you get your hands on it, see it in real life, memorization is shit."
I have a bit of money to spend but if I can learn and barter and research before I buy I will, I'd rather spend 3k on the studio because it took me 3 months of research than spending 5k and getting it done right now.
To sum it up, I'll see about getting my "hands on" stuff done myself (I have a few leads), unless you guys now some places in or around Raleigh/Cary/Chapel Hill/Durham, NC that are open for teaching, but until then I'd like a book, online lessons, something that says here it is, start here and we'll build from this. Not some links to another thread to another thread where it's assumed you know the ranges of high frequencies and low frequencies or that your walls of the studio need to be floated and at 6 degree angles and mics need pre-amps.
I was using adapters to plug 1/4" jacks into my g'd computer mic input for gods sake.
A lot of bitching and text here, but any help can be good, thanks guys.
I've been reading the forums on here, sayers, and gearslutz for a few months, there's so much info floating out there. I've played bass for a few years now and have found myself getting caught up in the aspects of recording for my band more than I like playing with them (which they're fine with cause my musical tastes (alt rock) are different than theirs (country rockish)), so I've changed my focus and am trying to better recording for them and other bands, we've been using some very DIY stuff to record with and I'm kinda sick of it.
I have 20k to convert the shop/garage of the house into a studio and purchase all the gear I can to get it up and running. Spending spree yahhh!
No.
Before I spend a damn dime, I need some books, some advice, and maybe some hands on training. Like I've said I've been reading the forums, but they're geared a lot towards people who know what the hell is going on or on the track to it.
I'd like to know what books are good, from mics to mixers, studio design, things like that, but they have to be dumbed down, if I'm reading them with no hands on, specs don't do shit for me. Once I can get my hands on some gear and mess with it, then books with specs and math will be benificial to me, but until then I'm of the school that "read all you want, memorize the figures and math... but until you get your hands on it, see it in real life, memorization is shit."
I have a bit of money to spend but if I can learn and barter and research before I buy I will, I'd rather spend 3k on the studio because it took me 3 months of research than spending 5k and getting it done right now.
To sum it up, I'll see about getting my "hands on" stuff done myself (I have a few leads), unless you guys now some places in or around Raleigh/Cary/Chapel Hill/Durham, NC that are open for teaching, but until then I'd like a book, online lessons, something that says here it is, start here and we'll build from this. Not some links to another thread to another thread where it's assumed you know the ranges of high frequencies and low frequencies or that your walls of the studio need to be floated and at 6 degree angles and mics need pre-amps.
I was using adapters to plug 1/4" jacks into my g'd computer mic input for gods sake.
A lot of bitching and text here, but any help can be good, thanks guys.