R
RitualMadness
New member
Hello all,
New to the boards here, so I will bow and say my hello's
I'm planning on spending the next 12-16 months researching and reading up, as I plan on making a move to the Toronto area next year and assembling together a home studio. My experience is heavily in IT, as a hobbyist programmer, server admin, support technician, and "all-around IT guy". I've been able to (for the most part) apply my knowledge to recording, and having a background in computer hardware and software I have been able to accomplish some (at least what I consider!) major steps toward my planned profession "paradigm-shift".
I've been doing amateur recording for about a year now, mainly using a microphone connected to a PC soundcard's Line In, using Fruity Loops for drums, and using Guitar Rig VST plugins to turn my electric guitar into bass tracks. Additionally I use Audition for track mixing and processing.
My recording results are pretty decent, and I'm certain if I had better pieces of equipment (e.g. a decent mic, a quality soundcard, a real bass guitar and drum kit) my final results would come out sounding even better, but really what I have (a mic, a guitar, an amp, some cabling, a computer, and software) really seem sufficient for my 'bare bones' recording needs.
What I would like is if some veterans here could possibly point out flaws and / or potential pitfalls of managing this sort of studio setup. I mean, I have the equipment a single musician would require in order to record music (or, for a band of musicians to individually record, as is my understanding of what one of the options are for pro recording, the other being micing everyone and recording ad-hoc live sessions). But I feel that I am somehow missing a bigger picture of what a recording studio needs to be capable of.
(On a side note, one of the things which really seems lacking in my setup is the ability to send different mic inputs to different tracks in Adobe Audition. Does it make sense to think that there should be a way to mic 5-20 different drums and cymbals, and be able to send them to different audio tracks on the computer? Alternatively I could send the mic inputs to a multitrack hardware mixer, and output a master signal as a single track, but this seems to offer less control. What are the options I have, if any?)
With the software I have, I can produce myriad of effects (if you've never heard of or used Native Instruments' Guitar Rig, please check it out!), silence track noise, normalize quiet tracks, and mix as many different tracks as the computer hardware can handle. At the end of the day, the audio tracks are burned to a DVD-R or CD-R (or USB keydrive, or USB harddrive, or whatever) for backup.
But... all this can't be enough! It seems too simple a setup to accomplish professional results. What other needs for a recording band or individual musician would need to be met in my situation?
Thanks for your time,
- Peter
New to the boards here, so I will bow and say my hello's

I'm planning on spending the next 12-16 months researching and reading up, as I plan on making a move to the Toronto area next year and assembling together a home studio. My experience is heavily in IT, as a hobbyist programmer, server admin, support technician, and "all-around IT guy". I've been able to (for the most part) apply my knowledge to recording, and having a background in computer hardware and software I have been able to accomplish some (at least what I consider!) major steps toward my planned profession "paradigm-shift".
I've been doing amateur recording for about a year now, mainly using a microphone connected to a PC soundcard's Line In, using Fruity Loops for drums, and using Guitar Rig VST plugins to turn my electric guitar into bass tracks. Additionally I use Audition for track mixing and processing.
My recording results are pretty decent, and I'm certain if I had better pieces of equipment (e.g. a decent mic, a quality soundcard, a real bass guitar and drum kit) my final results would come out sounding even better, but really what I have (a mic, a guitar, an amp, some cabling, a computer, and software) really seem sufficient for my 'bare bones' recording needs.
What I would like is if some veterans here could possibly point out flaws and / or potential pitfalls of managing this sort of studio setup. I mean, I have the equipment a single musician would require in order to record music (or, for a band of musicians to individually record, as is my understanding of what one of the options are for pro recording, the other being micing everyone and recording ad-hoc live sessions). But I feel that I am somehow missing a bigger picture of what a recording studio needs to be capable of.
(On a side note, one of the things which really seems lacking in my setup is the ability to send different mic inputs to different tracks in Adobe Audition. Does it make sense to think that there should be a way to mic 5-20 different drums and cymbals, and be able to send them to different audio tracks on the computer? Alternatively I could send the mic inputs to a multitrack hardware mixer, and output a master signal as a single track, but this seems to offer less control. What are the options I have, if any?)
With the software I have, I can produce myriad of effects (if you've never heard of or used Native Instruments' Guitar Rig, please check it out!), silence track noise, normalize quiet tracks, and mix as many different tracks as the computer hardware can handle. At the end of the day, the audio tracks are burned to a DVD-R or CD-R (or USB keydrive, or USB harddrive, or whatever) for backup.
But... all this can't be enough! It seems too simple a setup to accomplish professional results. What other needs for a recording band or individual musician would need to be met in my situation?
Thanks for your time,
- Peter
I'm coming from more of the perspective of a potential client having recorded in a few Toronto studios) Good luck to you, hopefully my rant was of some (minimal) use!