
RetroMan
King Of The 80s
I'm collaborating on a recording project with other members of my band - When we record stuff, we have to organize sessions and have each person ship their gear to my studio at home all the time. We're a pretty busy bunch of musicians with creativity killing day jobs so it makes it hard to do this all the time.
To fix this problem, I've been thinking of buying a portable studio of sorts so I can give that to each musician to work on their tracks in their own time - then I can import it into my studio computer which is running Cubase (that I do everything on)
As an alternative, most of the musicians have laptops so another option would to buy an audio interface such as those made by M-Audio or Tascam and get them to record their tracks on their laptops. This would also be a cheaper option.
I am currently swinging towards the interface option as it would be the easiest to work with for me - and the other members of my band.
The thing is, I am a newbie when it comes to these things. Do they actually act as a soundcard? most laptops have appallingly bad soundcards for recording - do these audio interface boxes overide the internal soundcard and fix all that?
Any suggestions as to what interface I should be looking at? I just want something that has both inputs (cannon & jack) and can record two tracks simultaneously if need be. Ive been looking at the Tascam US144 and the M-Audio Fast Track Pro. Both interesting little pieces of hardware.
Other than that, I could go back to plan A and lay down my cash on a portable studio, but that seems a pretty expensive way around it - having one of these interface things and a laptop - isn't that pretty my what a portastudio is? I've cut my teeth on Cubase and I like working with it - not a tiny little screen on a portable studio.
If there's anyone who can give me some advice on this, it would be greatly appreciated.
To fix this problem, I've been thinking of buying a portable studio of sorts so I can give that to each musician to work on their tracks in their own time - then I can import it into my studio computer which is running Cubase (that I do everything on)
As an alternative, most of the musicians have laptops so another option would to buy an audio interface such as those made by M-Audio or Tascam and get them to record their tracks on their laptops. This would also be a cheaper option.
I am currently swinging towards the interface option as it would be the easiest to work with for me - and the other members of my band.
The thing is, I am a newbie when it comes to these things. Do they actually act as a soundcard? most laptops have appallingly bad soundcards for recording - do these audio interface boxes overide the internal soundcard and fix all that?
Any suggestions as to what interface I should be looking at? I just want something that has both inputs (cannon & jack) and can record two tracks simultaneously if need be. Ive been looking at the Tascam US144 and the M-Audio Fast Track Pro. Both interesting little pieces of hardware.
Other than that, I could go back to plan A and lay down my cash on a portable studio, but that seems a pretty expensive way around it - having one of these interface things and a laptop - isn't that pretty my what a portastudio is? I've cut my teeth on Cubase and I like working with it - not a tiny little screen on a portable studio.
If there's anyone who can give me some advice on this, it would be greatly appreciated.