Nothing wrong with that.
But what happens far too often on these boards is that people want to have it both ways. They want to work at a hobby level (not necessarily just gear, though that's a big part of it, but also technique and work ethic) and also wind up with a pro sound. The #1 question above all on these boards is, "how do I get my mucking around to sound like the latest pro CD?" The answer is to stop mucking around and do things like a pro engineer/producer. The way to get a pro sound is to do things like a pro.
Unfortunately when we give that answer it's seen as elitist or snobbish; "this is, after all, 'home recording', not 'pro studio recording'." Well then, stop asking how to make a pro recording! It's really that simple. There are no shortcuts, there are no magic boxes, and there are no "Easy" buttons.
That said, of course one can make a pro-sounding recording at home. It requires these basic ingedients:
- performers ready to perform at pro level. A hack guitar player or drummer will sound like a hack guitar player or drummer no matter who engineers them.
- an engineer/producer with an "ear". This is I think one of the biggest and most overlooked problems with bad home recordings, and probably the weakest link in most home recording chains. This board is filled with those who's ears can't tell the difference between 200Hz and 400Hz, who are still fooled by volume (I'm not talking the volume wars here, I'm talking about the psychoacoustics of volume), who mix by RTA, and who think that clipping is inaudible mot of the time, and when it is audible it actually sounds good on acoustic instruments like drums and vocals. Unless or until one trains their ears to engineer levels and not just music advocate levels, they will never create a mix that sounds anything more than hobbiest, regardless of their gear.
- the disclipine to treat the recording process seriously, correctly, and in detail from the get-go. Get the tracking right. Learn to actually mix the tracking and not just compress it and layer the tracks like layers in lasagna. Learn what mastering actually means, and that volume is only one small part of it.
Instead we have a whole bunch of folk who - while they might not say this,this is how they actually work - use mixing to get the tracking right and use mastering to get the mix right. This is a completly ass backwards way to do it, it's the way that it's done by those who think that their magic plugins will save them from actually having to learn how to engineer.
Someone want a pro sounding recording? They won't find it in a box. A pro sounding recording is *engineered*. It's engineered by someone with ear, technique, and creativity. Ears can be trained and technique can be learned by anyone. The creativity will then follow.
G.
P.S. John, you get points for the phrase "rocket surgery" alone. That cracked me up and is getting put into my permanent rolodex of catch phrases