ElBarto,
My point is that I have been messing around with recording for over 10 years now. The last 3+ years have been intensive professionally. I have over 60k invested in equipment for a "project" studio.
I do not expect my setup to produce "radio quality" results. I do not even at this point expect myself to produce results that another engineer with a lot more experience and much better equipment can.
You know why home recording is so cool? Because you can learn what do and don't know about recording. You can learn enough to get your ideas on tape and listen to them to hopefully improve the SONG. You can bring your product along to a point where when you DO need a big time sounding recording, you don't go into the studio acting like a complete idiot and start trying to dictate things about the production that will ruin it. You will KNOW who you can trust and hire accordingly. THAT is the purpose of learning some recording on your own.
I for the most part had to give up on playing music to become an engineer. There just isn't enough hours in the day to work a full time job, learn about being an engineer in a field that constantly upgrades and gets better, and practice an instrument, and write good songs, and record them. Something has to give at some point. If you are lucky enough not to have to work a job, well, you have an extra 10 hours a day on your hands and could possibly pursue such an endevor. But, how are you going to afford the equipment? How are you going to pay the bills? You got a sugar momma supporting you? Then you could possbily become one of those "exceptions", because I can almost guarantee you that those guys where not trying to work, write, learn engineering, and record all at the same time.
So, you SHOULD learn to record. I am not against that at all!!! In fact, the artist's that come into my studio that have recorded their stuff at home generally get a much better sound on tape, and give me far less headaches while tracking and mixing than the artists that come in with little to no recording experience. They are hiring me because of the equipment list, and a trust that I know how to use the stuff, two things they don't have the benefit of, and don't care to invest in.
THAT is why you home record. In my last post though, I was saying that if you want to compete with the big boys, you will have little luck. You are against engineers that constantly get better from full time experience with engineering, and are contrantly using the most up to date gear. That is their life. So, just when you start getting a sound on tape that would have been killer 8 years ago, the big boys have upped the anty and produced something that will smoke it because of the experience and the better equipment.
People forget that while the low end of recording gear constantly get better, the top end does too. People forget also that not all the equipment that you buy at the Pro-Sumer level is really what it claims it is. Hell, Roland claims that their silly all in one boxes record "CD quality". Yeah, right. What CD quality?
Dude, I just invested into being able to record true 24 bit 48kHz files. I was mixing to a Fostex DAT machine before that. The Fostex has some pretty damn good 16 bit converters on it, but, while they may have been the shit a few years ago, they are really crappy sounding when compared to my new card on the computer. This is just one little example of an upgrade that made a significant difference in the sound. But you know what? I can make these 24 bit converters sound really bad when I try to convert the file down to 16 bit 44.1kHz for a CD. It comes down you dithering, and knowing when and how to dither. Still, I am just talking one thing that makes a huge difference in the sound quality.
I could go on and on about little things you can upgrade, all at a fairly sizable investment for most of us that will make huge differences in the sound quality of your recordings. I could document all day long things that I did before in production and now do much differently that make huge differences in the sound quality. That is my point. I spend lot's and lot's of time on this stuff, and have some pretty decent tools to work with. I have over $1300 invested into my monitoring system alone!!! That almost equals many home recordist's entire investment into gear for recording. Now, we are not talking about my $7k console, which is barely an entry level big time console. Or the thousands invested into little boxes that do very specific things that only make little differences. Each had it's own learning curve.
That is the point. I had to learn it all. I am still learning. On and on I learn. Getting better. But, I just don't claim at any point that I can produce recordings that rival big boy stuff. I get better "demo" recordings. But look at my investment in time and funds to produce killer sounding "demo's". I would need to invest 10 times what I did and spend another 3 years intensively on the new gear to start producing stuff that rivals the big boy stuff, but then, the big boys will have better toys then, thus upping the anty again.
Damn, I could go on and on. The point though is that be happy with getting decent sounding demo's with demo quality investments. Don't expect your little $10k investment to produce the kind of results that a $1,000,000 investment will get you.
Also, I have posted this before, and will say it again.
Most artist's just don't really know what sounds good anyway. They are incapable of producing a professional product. That is why the big time producers get paid the ungodly amounts of money they do, because they KNOW what sounds good. Argue that all you want, but my experience suggests that I am right here.
Also, many musicians suffer from some pretty significant hearing damage. Also, many musicians are way too impatient to learn how to record. Most every musician has too much ego to take constructive critisism improve to the level of many of the products we here and like that have big time production. Many musicians have something in them that makes them think that they sound much different then they actually do......
That is my take. Take it or leave it. I am not discouraging trying to learn this stuff, just suggesting that you must have a lot of patience and be prepared for many failures before you even get a somewhat decent product.
Ed