B
Bryan Medina
New member
Sigh...I did a nice reply to Bryan on my phone but I see it was eaten and disappeared without a trace!
On Cubase, ecc is right that you need to spend a bit of time in the tutorials. Most DAWs require you to manually set up the drivers you want to use and the input/outputs of your chosen interface (in your case the Alesis). You then have to route the two Alesis channels to your chosen tracks on Cubase. I don't have any Cubase experience but it has a very good reputation. It'll be worth taking time to head up the learning curve.
On the mic, assuming you have it on a stand rather than hand holding while you record, try putting it a bit above or below your mouth so it's angled at about 45 degrees when it points at your mouth from about six inches away. That should help--then if you set your levels as ecc suggests some compression on the vocal should sort things out.
I'll definitely look into setting up Cubase with a bit more patience. By the way what do you mean by compression? Sorry I know it's a basic question. Is compression like adjusting the voice sound? I'm definitely interested in doing so because when I lower gain on the Alesis I can barely hear my voice on the recording.