R
rimisrandma
Guest
I am going to buy a computer soon. I want to get a DAW to use on it. I went out and bought some inexpensive DVD's by Alfred Pro Audio so I could get a feel for some fairly common DAWS. In the videos I have watched Cubase, Pro Tools, Sonar. I have one for Logic as well, but have not watched it yet. So, far I like Sonar. Some of the stuff I ran across using Logic, on the net, I also liked.
One thing I noticed in what I have seen so far that is common and important is changing the BUFFER to reduce digital latency.
I want to use Amplitube 3, I have a pod XT that I will want to use, and I want to get Motu BPM 1.5 for a drum machine software program (for drums etc).
I will have to learn this (DAW) on my own and after seeing a guy whiz through the programs on the DVDs doing different stuff, I just get the feeling I will be totally lost and lose interest before gaining any ground to keep me rolling. I have a Boss Br900cd that I was able to learn and know it fairly well, but it is a simple recording device and there isn't a half dozen things you have to be aware of to set it up let alone set-up a track as you do in DAW programs.
I also have been looking at computers and I think I would rather get a totally decked out PC laptop as opposed to a Macbook Pro because the Mac is double the cost for the same specs. Another thing that bothers me about Mac is that you can't remove the battery and just run off wall power. I use a lot of battery operated drills etc and the fastest way to destroy a battery is to charge batteries that are already good. I would probably get a Toshiba or Asus with 6 or 8 GB of ram, 7200 rpm hardrive, also a 7200 external Hardrive for audio files, and an i7 processor model for something like $1,600 bux from newegg or best buy.
Now, I ran across Mixcraft. Is this a program that is legitimate or is it for village idiots? I will need it to work with my Pod XT, Amplitube 3, and Motu BPM 1.5. I also want it to have the control to change the buffer as mentioned above to control digital latency and I don't know if a simpler program like Mixcraft would allow you to do so. Since I am not going to audio school for this, I feel I could learn this on my own and it would do what I want, but I don't know.
Basically in the end, I just want to record a few guitar tracks over a drum machine track from the BPM 1.5 program. Then mix, maybe master with presets in Izotope Ozone down the road and burn a pretty decent CD.
Thanks
One thing I noticed in what I have seen so far that is common and important is changing the BUFFER to reduce digital latency.
I want to use Amplitube 3, I have a pod XT that I will want to use, and I want to get Motu BPM 1.5 for a drum machine software program (for drums etc).
I will have to learn this (DAW) on my own and after seeing a guy whiz through the programs on the DVDs doing different stuff, I just get the feeling I will be totally lost and lose interest before gaining any ground to keep me rolling. I have a Boss Br900cd that I was able to learn and know it fairly well, but it is a simple recording device and there isn't a half dozen things you have to be aware of to set it up let alone set-up a track as you do in DAW programs.
I also have been looking at computers and I think I would rather get a totally decked out PC laptop as opposed to a Macbook Pro because the Mac is double the cost for the same specs. Another thing that bothers me about Mac is that you can't remove the battery and just run off wall power. I use a lot of battery operated drills etc and the fastest way to destroy a battery is to charge batteries that are already good. I would probably get a Toshiba or Asus with 6 or 8 GB of ram, 7200 rpm hardrive, also a 7200 external Hardrive for audio files, and an i7 processor model for something like $1,600 bux from newegg or best buy.
Now, I ran across Mixcraft. Is this a program that is legitimate or is it for village idiots? I will need it to work with my Pod XT, Amplitube 3, and Motu BPM 1.5. I also want it to have the control to change the buffer as mentioned above to control digital latency and I don't know if a simpler program like Mixcraft would allow you to do so. Since I am not going to audio school for this, I feel I could learn this on my own and it would do what I want, but I don't know.
Basically in the end, I just want to record a few guitar tracks over a drum machine track from the BPM 1.5 program. Then mix, maybe master with presets in Izotope Ozone down the road and burn a pretty decent CD.
Thanks