
Illsidgus
Desiccated Member
To begin let me give you all an idea of where I am coming from. I have been a musician since I was seven years old and started taking piano lessons. I'll just say that I have been a musician for over 50 years and leave it at that. I started playing in bands around 1968/69. I am sure some of you remember those years when a typical band had an organ player, a bass, guitar, drums and at least one vocalist and we all played/sang through two amps if we were lucky enough to have two amps. Any recording we did was either on one of those small portable reel to reel recorders that would use either 3" or 5" reel or one of those newfangled cassette recorders.
Back in 1984 or 85, I don't remember which, I entered the big leagues and purchased a Tascam 244 which I still use today. To mix down to I have an old Akia 1722W reel to reel which I know is not a mastering deck in any sense of the word, but that's what I have. I put all that away for years and have just recently pulled it back out. I am getting old and it is time that I put the music that I love to write on tape as a legacy, as a way of leaving something of my love of music behind when I die.
Now to the mastering/non mastering. Considering the two pieces of recording equipment that I have, are there any tips, trick, techniques that I can use to come as close to a mastered recording as possible without any mastering hardware? Oh, I also have the free version of Audacity on my computer. Does Audacity have any mastering capabilities? I don't want to leave behind a bunch of crap, I want my recorded musical vision to be of a good enough quality that it will be a pleasant listening experience to whomever may hear it in the future. I wish that I could afford to buy a compressor and a reverb unit and all those other components that refine what has been recorded but I can't. The first five pieces that I am going to record should be fairly easy to deal with as they are short, moderately easy guitar ensemble pieces for three guitars that I wrote back in 2005. After that I intend to record some of the older pop era stuff that I wrote as far back as 1971 as well as some new songs. So any help would be very greatly appreciated.
I am sorry this was such a long ramble but I thought that if you all had a small insight into my mind and life that you could better understand the kind of help that I need.
"I don't need music to live, but without it why would I want to?"
Back in 1984 or 85, I don't remember which, I entered the big leagues and purchased a Tascam 244 which I still use today. To mix down to I have an old Akia 1722W reel to reel which I know is not a mastering deck in any sense of the word, but that's what I have. I put all that away for years and have just recently pulled it back out. I am getting old and it is time that I put the music that I love to write on tape as a legacy, as a way of leaving something of my love of music behind when I die.
Now to the mastering/non mastering. Considering the two pieces of recording equipment that I have, are there any tips, trick, techniques that I can use to come as close to a mastered recording as possible without any mastering hardware? Oh, I also have the free version of Audacity on my computer. Does Audacity have any mastering capabilities? I don't want to leave behind a bunch of crap, I want my recorded musical vision to be of a good enough quality that it will be a pleasant listening experience to whomever may hear it in the future. I wish that I could afford to buy a compressor and a reverb unit and all those other components that refine what has been recorded but I can't. The first five pieces that I am going to record should be fairly easy to deal with as they are short, moderately easy guitar ensemble pieces for three guitars that I wrote back in 2005. After that I intend to record some of the older pop era stuff that I wrote as far back as 1971 as well as some new songs. So any help would be very greatly appreciated.
I am sorry this was such a long ramble but I thought that if you all had a small insight into my mind and life that you could better understand the kind of help that I need.
"I don't need music to live, but without it why would I want to?"