D
daffy
New member
Well, I've spent some hours reading and trying to figure out what I should do and I'm still undecided. Actually, undecided is too settled. Clueless is more like it. A little background first. I am a solo singer at square one with a "setup" that couldn't get much worse. What is it? I record on a PC with a Soundblaster Augidy 2 ZS and the mic that came with the computer. Yes, one of those tiny microphones. Believe it or not, I actually have done recordings on this
. Don't worry, I haven't made anyone listen to them. I'm inching towards that direction and I would like to upgrade. What I need is a better mic that will work with my current PC. In theory, this shouldn't be hard to accomplish, but there's so many considerations.
I would like to take the tiniest next step up. This means inexpensive, since I don't anticipate anyone else to listen yet. I am only looking to spend $100 to get a better setup and the less the better. If you could think of this as helping me find a better toy to play with, that would be accurrate
. To give you an idea of what I'm looking at, I'm thinking of getting the Nady SP-5 or something similar for my mic. I guess the confusing part is getting that mic to work with my PC. For this "upgrade," all I want is better sound and I assume if I can get this mic connected, it will do the job (right?). I will only use one source and that's to record vocals (no bands or instruments). My first thought was to convert the XLR to 1/8" somehow, but I know that this is the worse route and if it will even be tolerable I'm not really sure. Perhaps one of those external devices would be better? I am aware of mixers and audio interfaces, though I'm still not clear what the difference is. One allows you to balance the audio channels and the other just allows you to connect them? Then there's the pre-amp, which amplifies the signal?
I know that the signal will be weak if I convert the XLR to 1/8", but do I need a pre-amp if I use an audio interface/mixer?
If I really just want this small upgrade and not thinking about future upgrades (condenser mics, phantom power, other stuff I don't know), what is the best way to go about it? I do know that I can do the M-Audio Fast Track or M-Audio Audio Buddy and that may work, but even those devices seem like they may be overkill. I like those because they have the USB connection (my computer doesn't have firewire) and I don't know how else I can connect other devices to the computer (something about using the line-in?). Is there not a simpler way to connect an XLR mic and get decent sound? If not, then what other models should I be looking at or are those two the most suitable for my purposes? Any suggestions and advice are appreciated. Thanks a lot
.
. Don't worry, I haven't made anyone listen to them. I'm inching towards that direction and I would like to upgrade. What I need is a better mic that will work with my current PC. In theory, this shouldn't be hard to accomplish, but there's so many considerations.I would like to take the tiniest next step up. This means inexpensive, since I don't anticipate anyone else to listen yet. I am only looking to spend $100 to get a better setup and the less the better. If you could think of this as helping me find a better toy to play with, that would be accurrate
. To give you an idea of what I'm looking at, I'm thinking of getting the Nady SP-5 or something similar for my mic. I guess the confusing part is getting that mic to work with my PC. For this "upgrade," all I want is better sound and I assume if I can get this mic connected, it will do the job (right?). I will only use one source and that's to record vocals (no bands or instruments). My first thought was to convert the XLR to 1/8" somehow, but I know that this is the worse route and if it will even be tolerable I'm not really sure. Perhaps one of those external devices would be better? I am aware of mixers and audio interfaces, though I'm still not clear what the difference is. One allows you to balance the audio channels and the other just allows you to connect them? Then there's the pre-amp, which amplifies the signal?
I know that the signal will be weak if I convert the XLR to 1/8", but do I need a pre-amp if I use an audio interface/mixer?If I really just want this small upgrade and not thinking about future upgrades (condenser mics, phantom power, other stuff I don't know), what is the best way to go about it? I do know that I can do the M-Audio Fast Track or M-Audio Audio Buddy and that may work, but even those devices seem like they may be overkill. I like those because they have the USB connection (my computer doesn't have firewire) and I don't know how else I can connect other devices to the computer (something about using the line-in?). Is there not a simpler way to connect an XLR mic and get decent sound? If not, then what other models should I be looking at or are those two the most suitable for my purposes? Any suggestions and advice are appreciated. Thanks a lot
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