M
mercyme
New member
Hi Everyone,
I am new to all this and still establishing my setup. Unlike most of you, my primary use of home/PC recording is not for music (although that will be a hobby use for me), but to record voice-over material.
I was hoping to sort of dip a few toes into the water to get started (as opposed to jumping off the high dive) but I keep discovering that I "need" yet another piece of equipment or software. Here is my planned setup:
- Good mic (probably Rode NT1000)
- dbx 286A mic preamp/compressor/de-esser/noise gate/expander
- CoolEdit 2000 (or perhaps Pro Tools Free -- I'm open to suggestions here)
- Dell laptop Inspiron 5000e, PIII 700, 128 MB RAM (512 max), 20GB HD w/ ESS Maestro 2E sound card.
From what I'm reading, it appears that my laptop's onboard soundcard (ESS Maestro 2E) might be a critically weak link in this setup. I'm aware that the MIC IN input is basically worthless, but I had been under the impression that if I ran the mic preamp into the LINE IN input, I could get a decent recording. Is this not the case?
I've seen talk about various laptop sound card solutions, primarily the Digigram VX PCMCIA sound card and the MOTU 828 firewire interface, and I'm left with this question: IS SPENDING ANOTHER $500 - $700 FOR A SOUND CARD REALLY NECESSARY TO GET GOOD RECORDINGS?
Remember that for the most part, I will be recording one mono channel of voice. I will be adding some effects with the editing software and that is about it. Of course, my musical hobby needs may grow, but that remains to be seen.
I'm aware that the ESS Maestro 2E is NOT a high end recording device by any measure, but I was hoping that it might suffice to get a reasonably good job done. Is it too much of a cheat?
I truly appreciate any advice you can offer.
I am new to all this and still establishing my setup. Unlike most of you, my primary use of home/PC recording is not for music (although that will be a hobby use for me), but to record voice-over material.
I was hoping to sort of dip a few toes into the water to get started (as opposed to jumping off the high dive) but I keep discovering that I "need" yet another piece of equipment or software. Here is my planned setup:
- Good mic (probably Rode NT1000)
- dbx 286A mic preamp/compressor/de-esser/noise gate/expander
- CoolEdit 2000 (or perhaps Pro Tools Free -- I'm open to suggestions here)
- Dell laptop Inspiron 5000e, PIII 700, 128 MB RAM (512 max), 20GB HD w/ ESS Maestro 2E sound card.
From what I'm reading, it appears that my laptop's onboard soundcard (ESS Maestro 2E) might be a critically weak link in this setup. I'm aware that the MIC IN input is basically worthless, but I had been under the impression that if I ran the mic preamp into the LINE IN input, I could get a decent recording. Is this not the case?
I've seen talk about various laptop sound card solutions, primarily the Digigram VX PCMCIA sound card and the MOTU 828 firewire interface, and I'm left with this question: IS SPENDING ANOTHER $500 - $700 FOR A SOUND CARD REALLY NECESSARY TO GET GOOD RECORDINGS?
Remember that for the most part, I will be recording one mono channel of voice. I will be adding some effects with the editing software and that is about it. Of course, my musical hobby needs may grow, but that remains to be seen.
I'm aware that the ESS Maestro 2E is NOT a high end recording device by any measure, but I was hoping that it might suffice to get a reasonably good job done. Is it too much of a cheat?
I truly appreciate any advice you can offer.