M
Mike3354
New member
Hello everyone,
I'm relatively new to home recording (and brand new to the forum). I've been doing some recording on my computer with just an SM57, but I've decided to expand and to start creating my own home studio. I have been doing some research on my own, but I feel I need people with more knowledge to clear a few questions up for me. I'm not sure if this is where I should post, but it seems like the best place since I am a newbie to recording.
First off, I will mostly be recording folky music (acoustic guitar, vocals, piano, trumpet, banjo, percussion like shakers and tambourines, maybe some electric guitars and drums) and am looking for "warm" sounding recordings (think Devendra Banhart, Iron & Wine, M. Ward). Also, I am almost always a solo recording musician, so I don't need a large number of simultaneously recordable tracks, but recording with a second person might happen, and I need enough for everything I'm doing at once (for example, recording vocals and guitar at the same time. I'm sure I could have described this in a more easily understandable way, sorry)
So, here is the gear I have been looking at - please give me any advice that you can.
Phonic Helix 12 channel mixer/firewire interface
ART MPA Gold dual channel tube mic preamp
MXL V69 Mogami Edition (tube, large-diaphragm condenser mic)
Studio Projects C1 Microphone
Steinberg Cubase SX3
So, this is what seems like it will start me off in the right direction (supposedly warm sounding mics through a tube preamp?). And, in the future I plan to add more microphones and tube mic pre's. The one problem I think I have with that setup is the Phonic Helix 12 channel mixer/firewire interface. I don't think I will be doing much (if any) mixing/eq'ing pre-recording, and I want to get tube mic-pre's, so this gear seems a bit pointless to me. I like the fact that is firewire (which, according to what I know has discreet channel recording), but it seems like there is a better interface out there. Maybe something without a built in mixer or mic-pre's, with the addition of discreet channels out (allowing me, again as far as I understand, to send each channel through a mixer (and thus, outboard gear like EQ's and compressors, as opposed to the plugins in Cubase that take their place) to do post-recording mixing and production).
I've done my best to describe what I am looking for, and I hope someone can help me. Please, ask me any questions about what I am looking for and I will do my best to answer them, and please give me what knowledge you have on better gear/ways of recording. Thanks in advance.
Oh, I almost forgot to put this question, but if I can't find something with discreet outs, is it possible to get around that for outboard gear (EQ's, compression, effects processors, etc.) by just using the outs that have all the channels playing (sorry, I'm not sure the correct name for them), but muting every channel that I don't want to process, and re-recording the processed track(s) as a different track? Thanks.
-Mike
I'm relatively new to home recording (and brand new to the forum). I've been doing some recording on my computer with just an SM57, but I've decided to expand and to start creating my own home studio. I have been doing some research on my own, but I feel I need people with more knowledge to clear a few questions up for me. I'm not sure if this is where I should post, but it seems like the best place since I am a newbie to recording.
First off, I will mostly be recording folky music (acoustic guitar, vocals, piano, trumpet, banjo, percussion like shakers and tambourines, maybe some electric guitars and drums) and am looking for "warm" sounding recordings (think Devendra Banhart, Iron & Wine, M. Ward). Also, I am almost always a solo recording musician, so I don't need a large number of simultaneously recordable tracks, but recording with a second person might happen, and I need enough for everything I'm doing at once (for example, recording vocals and guitar at the same time. I'm sure I could have described this in a more easily understandable way, sorry)
So, here is the gear I have been looking at - please give me any advice that you can.
Phonic Helix 12 channel mixer/firewire interface
ART MPA Gold dual channel tube mic preamp
MXL V69 Mogami Edition (tube, large-diaphragm condenser mic)
Studio Projects C1 Microphone
Steinberg Cubase SX3
So, this is what seems like it will start me off in the right direction (supposedly warm sounding mics through a tube preamp?). And, in the future I plan to add more microphones and tube mic pre's. The one problem I think I have with that setup is the Phonic Helix 12 channel mixer/firewire interface. I don't think I will be doing much (if any) mixing/eq'ing pre-recording, and I want to get tube mic-pre's, so this gear seems a bit pointless to me. I like the fact that is firewire (which, according to what I know has discreet channel recording), but it seems like there is a better interface out there. Maybe something without a built in mixer or mic-pre's, with the addition of discreet channels out (allowing me, again as far as I understand, to send each channel through a mixer (and thus, outboard gear like EQ's and compressors, as opposed to the plugins in Cubase that take their place) to do post-recording mixing and production).
I've done my best to describe what I am looking for, and I hope someone can help me. Please, ask me any questions about what I am looking for and I will do my best to answer them, and please give me what knowledge you have on better gear/ways of recording. Thanks in advance.
Oh, I almost forgot to put this question, but if I can't find something with discreet outs, is it possible to get around that for outboard gear (EQ's, compression, effects processors, etc.) by just using the outs that have all the channels playing (sorry, I'm not sure the correct name for them), but muting every channel that I don't want to process, and re-recording the processed track(s) as a different track? Thanks.
-Mike