B
bendeho
New member
Hi everyone,
I'm new to this forum and to the whole home recording game so i'm a little confused as to what sort of equipment is needed to get a certain 'base' sound quality to my recordings. I'm primarily interested in getting lead/rhythm guitar sounds that sound good, drums i'll most likely use samples/sequencing. There will be vocals too but i guess i'm more interested in solving my guitar sound issues first.
This is my setup:
-Decent PC (p4 2.6gig, 1 gig ram etc)
-Tascam US-122
-Cubase
-Behringer V-amp 2
-Sm 58 vocal mic
-Samick electric guitar (strat ripoff
)
Now before i got the v-amp i was running my guitar straight into my us-122 and using VST effects (like simuanalog guitar modelling plugins) and it sounded "okay" but it like i had to preamp the signal so much it was getting noisy and the effects sounded muddy and tinny.
I was under the impression that the v-amp would solve that problem, and allow me to get some solid sounds from the guitar. Well it kind of has. Some of the sounds are cool, but they are still not as 'rich' as i'd like i guess. I've tried having 4 channels of the one sound and panning them 1) left 2) half left 3) half right 4) right. This spreads the sound out a bit which is nicer but it still doesn't have the same quality i'm looking for.
Now for my questions:
1) I was told that (especially with digital) i should avoid clipping altogether. Does this mean that if i ever see a red light i should be doing a retake? Surely this means that to be 100% in the green i'll be sacrificing a lot of detail i'd otherwise be getting since the average level will be quite low?
2) I find that cleaner sounds tend to come across better with the v-amp -> tascam setup, distortion sounds like crap, not meaty at all. Does this mean i'm stuck with just avoiding all distortion or are there ways around it? Any other particular techniques for getting good sounds out of what is clearly no perfect setup?
3) This question might be slightly cubase specific but i think it should be fairly basic nonetheless. When i have a heap of channels with varying levels setup in cubase, and i want to mix them to a pleasant proportional volume, what is the best way to do this? I have been just adjusting volume but if i have any too high they start to distort. Should i be working out the highest level channel, setting it to -4, and then basing the others proportionately lower volumes? Or should i be destructively gaining (posititively or negatively) each channel so they are all at the default -4db volume. As you can see i'm a little confused about the technical theory here.
4) I might be walking into something here but is there anything i can get/buy that will significantly improve my sound quality without breaking the bank? I'm told a large diaphram mic would be a big improvement over the sm58 for vocals but that is about all i know of. Maybe a mixer with quality preamps before i go into the v-amp?
5) This reminds me, what would you say is better: a quality line preamp which goes into the us-122 for software plugins, or a v-amp to the us-122?
Thanks in advance for any suggestions you can give guys. I know this has dragged on a little so i'll stop now.
Thanks!
I'm new to this forum and to the whole home recording game so i'm a little confused as to what sort of equipment is needed to get a certain 'base' sound quality to my recordings. I'm primarily interested in getting lead/rhythm guitar sounds that sound good, drums i'll most likely use samples/sequencing. There will be vocals too but i guess i'm more interested in solving my guitar sound issues first.
This is my setup:
-Decent PC (p4 2.6gig, 1 gig ram etc)
-Tascam US-122
-Cubase
-Behringer V-amp 2
-Sm 58 vocal mic
-Samick electric guitar (strat ripoff

Now before i got the v-amp i was running my guitar straight into my us-122 and using VST effects (like simuanalog guitar modelling plugins) and it sounded "okay" but it like i had to preamp the signal so much it was getting noisy and the effects sounded muddy and tinny.
I was under the impression that the v-amp would solve that problem, and allow me to get some solid sounds from the guitar. Well it kind of has. Some of the sounds are cool, but they are still not as 'rich' as i'd like i guess. I've tried having 4 channels of the one sound and panning them 1) left 2) half left 3) half right 4) right. This spreads the sound out a bit which is nicer but it still doesn't have the same quality i'm looking for.
Now for my questions:
1) I was told that (especially with digital) i should avoid clipping altogether. Does this mean that if i ever see a red light i should be doing a retake? Surely this means that to be 100% in the green i'll be sacrificing a lot of detail i'd otherwise be getting since the average level will be quite low?
2) I find that cleaner sounds tend to come across better with the v-amp -> tascam setup, distortion sounds like crap, not meaty at all. Does this mean i'm stuck with just avoiding all distortion or are there ways around it? Any other particular techniques for getting good sounds out of what is clearly no perfect setup?
3) This question might be slightly cubase specific but i think it should be fairly basic nonetheless. When i have a heap of channels with varying levels setup in cubase, and i want to mix them to a pleasant proportional volume, what is the best way to do this? I have been just adjusting volume but if i have any too high they start to distort. Should i be working out the highest level channel, setting it to -4, and then basing the others proportionately lower volumes? Or should i be destructively gaining (posititively or negatively) each channel so they are all at the default -4db volume. As you can see i'm a little confused about the technical theory here.
4) I might be walking into something here but is there anything i can get/buy that will significantly improve my sound quality without breaking the bank? I'm told a large diaphram mic would be a big improvement over the sm58 for vocals but that is about all i know of. Maybe a mixer with quality preamps before i go into the v-amp?
5) This reminds me, what would you say is better: a quality line preamp which goes into the us-122 for software plugins, or a v-amp to the us-122?
Thanks in advance for any suggestions you can give guys. I know this has dragged on a little so i'll stop now.
Thanks!