
grimtraveller
If only for a moment.....
Any tall Englishman could've told you that !Now.
The contraction of "you are" is "you're" not "your".
That is all.

Any tall Englishman could've told you that !Now.
The contraction of "you are" is "you're" not "your".
That is all.
*facepalm*
Seriously, you need to talk to your drummer and/or his dad. If they're so smart they should be able to tell you exactly what you need. And you'd be better off taking their expert advice over a bunch of random yahoo's on the internet. Show your drummer the tweakheadz page, maybe it'll spark some questions or considerations that wouldn't have otherwise been thought of. You do not want holes in your knowledge base when you're putting a new home-studio shopping list together, you're gonna waste hundreds if not thousands of dollars.
BTW, Cubase is an AWESOME DAW, I like it better than protools. Even the free LE versions that come with the interfaces are plenty functional.
theres a relatively cheap 8 input interface that ive been looking at and has gotten decent reviews. this brings me to my next question: mics.
what kind of microphones do i need if im recording drums? what about vocals? and if i plug the guitar into an amp instead of an interface, what kinds of mics do i need then?
EVERYONE QUIET PLEASE !
OK...
Now.
The contraction of "you are" is "you're" not "your".
That is all.
Thank you![]()
i like you.
*Checks Wikipedia*
It appears that your right.
Thanks for the advice, but im confused why you used that quote...?
and is free Cubase better or worse than paid for Reaper?
Is it $60? Something like that.
... But what is the logical edit feature? something i would use, or probably not?...
Let me be the only one here to recommend that, if your total budget permits, there are standalone recorder options that, for newbies, eliminate questions other than monitor and microphone types. The best value these days would seem to be the Tascam 2488. I personally use the Korg D3200. Either will allow export of recorded tracks to WAV files that can later be imported into software DAW for further processing/remixing etc. It can be argued that doing it on a PC provides better quality and more flexibiliity, but if the idea is to get up and running quickly....
That looks amazing, but WAY too expensive.
Lemme give you a budget update:
I have about $1000 dollars to pour into this thing. but that is about my total life savings from since birth. i would prefer not to spend all that. my guitarist has been offered an amazing deal: $1000 for getting all A's on his report card(crazy, right? 1000 freaking dollars!!) to go towards the studio. my drummer and guitarist will also contribute towards this too, but i dont know how much.
It might even be better to start cheap to get an idea of what you want, 'cause there's lots of different ways of working.
That looks amazing, but WAY too expensive.
Lemme give you a budget update:
I have about $1000 dollars ...