Ok Ok enough already pglewis... the last thing mip needs is more questions. He needs strait answers.
You said you were going to buy an 8-track, and then people... yada yada... It sounds like you're telling my story. I was looking into a Roland 8-track, and it was around $3,000, maybe a little more. Then I started looking at the price to get a computer with all the gear to get me going, and it was actualy less expensive. AND, you're not limited to a wussy 8 tracks, you have UNLIMITED TRACKS. Just think about that for a second. One song I recorded a while ago had 38 tracks, yeah, maybe a couple of them were just being taken up by one 5-second sound, but I was able to do it.
What you have to do is go to
www.fullcompass.com. They build computers for recording. They're great, I went there (I live in the same town as them fortunately) and I told them what I wanted, they knew what it was I wanted, and they put it together for me. Hand over the check and take it home. Of course it took a couple weeks for them to put it together... Your MHZ question, and the RAM, and Hard Drive, and OS... don't worry about it if you get it from Full Compass. Who cares what OS you have?? Does anyone still care about monopolies?? No, we care about recording music, and we're not buying a computer to get into some stupid battle about Bill Gate's earnings. Just so you know though, you will probably need a 600 MHZ or higher, 128 megs of ram, and 25+ gigs on your hard drive. I have two hard drives, a 10 (for windows and system stuff) and a 15 for all my sound files. And I'm looking to upgrade soon.
Your second question... Yes, you use your computer with a good sound card and software to multitrack. If you already have a mixer then great, if not, you'd have to get one anyway right? What I have for my soundcard is the Layla by Echo. It has 8 inputs (1/4", not low impedence) and 10 outputs. It has an external box that is rack mountable and you just use the cable that comes with it to plug into the soundcard that comes with it. You use input 1 and 2 for the left and right of your mixer, problem solved. And what software will you need? I use Cakewalk for my multitracking and Sound Forge 4.5 for my mastering. Not that Cakewalk is the best or anything, but it's what I use. There are better programs, but you're going to pay for it, but you get what you pay for.
Your third question about monitors... Get powered monitors. You just use two of the outputs of the Layla for the monitors. Problem solved.
As for direct boxes... you can use them if you want, it's not much different than anything else you've known.
As for electric drums, you want to go directly into an input of the sound card from the output of the electric drums box. You want to get the true sound recorded, not a miced sound.
Any other advanages? Yeah, unlimited tracks, easy editing with click and drag, undo/redo, it's SOOO easy to clean up tracks of unwanted sound, the sound is clean... I could go on and on as to why computer recording is the way to go, but I won't.
As for disadvantages... You don't get to have fun splicing 2" peices of tape together when you're putting takes together, that's always fun to do... ewww.
E-mail me if you have anymore questions.
[This message has been edited by Brian Grey (edited 07-08-2000).]