Recording Books

  • Thread starter Thread starter BrettB
  • Start date Start date
Recording Books, huh?

Well what I would do is I would put a mic in front of the the book, wait for it to make a sound and set the levels, then crank rec and record it :D.
Then repeat it on every book you need to record ;) :D ;)

Keijo
 
hey keijo,
you reminded me of an english teacher who once told me the expression 'time flies' could have another meaning, like if a bunch of flies were racing, and you timed them.;) he was such a geek.

adriano
 
Get the Tape Op book by Larry Crane. I remember it as being pretty cheap and a wonderful book.
 
If you don't mind reading on-line or making printouts Roger Nichols has virtually every article he's written in the past 13 years available at his home page. You'll get more out of that than any book probably.

http://www.rogernichols.com/DAEQ.html

He and Craig Anderton among others also field questions quite a bit at Music Player forums:

http://www.musicplayer.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi

I'd agree that Craig Anderton's old book on digital recording is quite good for the beginner. Also CakeWalk Power is a nice mid-level book on computer recording and will apply to most recording software, not just CW.
 
thanks a lot, windowman. i'll check those links out.
i have cakewalk power, and quite a few other beginner and intermediate level books already. but i feel i'm really not a beginner anymore. i guess i'm moving from intermediate and up right now, since i'm learning so much stuff so quickly all the time as i get hands-on experience producing my own music.
 
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