
snow lizard
Dedicated Slacker
cheywind said:my head is cluttered with a whole bunch of info right now...it could be I do know...I just don't know it.
That's a good point, and it's where the learning curve really begins.
Cheywind and SMX Dizzy - don't be intimidated by learning stuff. A lot of it's common sense, but I'm beginning to think that you guys are getting confused, just because there's some simple basic stuff missing. If you want, I can go into detail, from the beginning, on how to record on a Digital Audio Workstation, or DAW, which is just a fancy, short name for a computer set up to do some serious audio work. I think it might help. I hope so, anyway.
This is really newbie material, but that shouldn't be too much of a big deal in this forum I hope.
This is the beginning, it's important, and it can help you decide what you need to buy and what you don't.
It's called the Recording Chain. A sample recording chain would look something like this - I'll use drums with one microphone to a DAW as an example:
1.) the song
2.) the musician, or performance
3.) the drums
4.) microphone
5.) preamp
6.) audio interface, or soundcard
7.) the computer
In this imaginary chain, there are 7 links. Everything follows a logical order. The stuff that comes first is the most important. Stuff that comes after is still important, but less so. A great song recorded on a cheap boom box is still a great song. This might seem too basic, but you're going to hear it repeated a lot.
Even though stuff that comes after is less important, it's still important. The computer doesn't matter much compared to everything else, but at a minimum it has to be compatable with everything you want to do with it. Some computers are finicky with hardware, or multitasking, USB drivers or whatever. The biggest, fastest, friendliest computer will be more enjoyable, but it's not absolutely critical. 7200 RPM hard disk, bigger hard disk is better, adequate and compatable RAM (I think Win98 has a maximum, but usually more RAM is always better) and anything over around a 300 megahertz processor will record. It might be damn slow with plugins, and it might stall if you try to run too many tracks at once, but the quality comes from the soundcard before that. Soundcard is more important.
Now let's say I made a longer chain - we'll throw in a compressor, an EQ, a sonic maximizer (whatever that is...) a mixing desk and a de-esser. Now we've got 12 links instead of 7. The electronic links only start at 4, so now we've got 9 pieces of gear plugged in, instead of 4. Every single piece of gear in that chain will add its own bit of noise and muck to the signal, so the shorter the chain is, the cleaner it is. Add to this that you can do mixing, compression and EQ, reverb and a whole bunch of other stuff (the virtual rack) in the computer after the signal is recorded as clean as possible, with few, but good quality hardware things. Makes it seem less necessary I hope?
The tone of your recordings will be influenced by what gear you have, and what post production tricks you know, like EQ and stuff. A lot of people make the mistake of thinking they can fix it later with post production, but an EQ can not give you what was never there to begin with most of the time.
For example, if you've got 4 year old pinstripes with a few rolls of tape on them on your drums, it will sound nothing like a well tuned drum kit with no dampening whatsoever, and brand new coated Ambassadors. EQ can't give you that.
Right here, I'd like to point out that I'm no pro at this. I'm just a home recording guy, but I've done my best to learn the basics and many of the pros on this forum have helped me, knowingly or not, just from being here and sharing their knowledge. Also, I've learned quite a lot of basics. Nobody knows everything, so the more people that help out the better. I'm here to learn too.
Does this make any sense? Is it too confusing? is it too basic? Any questions on what I just typed?
For the next step, I think it might be good to mention a couple of basic things about microphones, and different types of signals, and how they're compatable or not with different equipment, and what to do about it.
Should I continue?
sl