T
thebricks1
New member
I'm a hip-hop artist (more of a hobbyist but am lookin' to get back into it) and I'm lookin' to get my own setup for recording vocals. I'm tired of chasin' producers for beats and engineers for sessions; I rather learn how to engineer my own sessions and have access to my own studio/equipment at my own convenience right in the basement of my home. I'm NOT a musician, nor do I have any plans on ever learning to play an instrument. Also, I'm NOT a producer, nor do I ever intend on ever becoming one. Am just lookin' for advice on what would be a good setup for RECORDING QUALITY VOCALS.
For example, lets say I hear a hot track online, and I decide I want to write to it. I simply want to bounce it out to whatever software I'll be using, and record my vocals over it. And perhaps when I learn the software, I'd be able to engineer fellow artists recording sessions, and have a seasoned engineer mix/master it afterwards.
What would be the software you'd recommend with the least learning curve, and for quality recording? I looked at protools and considered gettin' the mbox 2 mini, but a gut feelin' has prevented me from pullin' the trigger on it. I've also heard good things about Logic, but don't know enough about it yet to decide.
From my frustrating experiences w/ engineers who run protools on a PC, I'm all set w/ that. I'm considering an iMac b/c I know I can't deal w/ slow computers crashin' and freezin' up all the time, and from what I hear, Macs are alot better for recording. Would you recommend Protools LE w/ a Mac, or something like Logic? Or is there another software you'd recommend, and what interface would you use w/ it?
Again, I want the highest quality possible, so what mic would you recommend (i know they recommend a large diaphragm condenser mic for a studio, but which one?) Also, what monitors would you recommend? Do I need anything else besides the computer, software, mic, and monitors? I'd appreciate any/all advice. Thanks in advance.
For example, lets say I hear a hot track online, and I decide I want to write to it. I simply want to bounce it out to whatever software I'll be using, and record my vocals over it. And perhaps when I learn the software, I'd be able to engineer fellow artists recording sessions, and have a seasoned engineer mix/master it afterwards.
What would be the software you'd recommend with the least learning curve, and for quality recording? I looked at protools and considered gettin' the mbox 2 mini, but a gut feelin' has prevented me from pullin' the trigger on it. I've also heard good things about Logic, but don't know enough about it yet to decide.
From my frustrating experiences w/ engineers who run protools on a PC, I'm all set w/ that. I'm considering an iMac b/c I know I can't deal w/ slow computers crashin' and freezin' up all the time, and from what I hear, Macs are alot better for recording. Would you recommend Protools LE w/ a Mac, or something like Logic? Or is there another software you'd recommend, and what interface would you use w/ it?
Again, I want the highest quality possible, so what mic would you recommend (i know they recommend a large diaphragm condenser mic for a studio, but which one?) Also, what monitors would you recommend? Do I need anything else besides the computer, software, mic, and monitors? I'd appreciate any/all advice. Thanks in advance.