K
kevinb9n
New member
Say I'm a n00b. I want to
- record audio (acoustic&electric guitars, vocals, perhaps one day a cheap drum machine such as the yamaha dd55 and/or a cheap keyboard such as the casio wk3000)
- have a decent selection of good effects
- actually be able to figure out how to use these effects! (e.g. in audacity, if you choose reverb, it just gives you these seven different parameters that you have to choose. how the hell am I supposed to know what numbers to use? YOU'RE the audio expert, dammit! gimme some presets! at least play my track and let me hear how it changes in realtime as I move the sliders around!)
- be able to apply some of those effects to the monitor mix so that I can hear them in real-time in my headphones as I'm recording
- to do simple punch-ins and overdubs, in a simple fashion and also very simply
- maybe to play around with some MIDI stuff. I don't know what exactly I need here since I don't even have the drum machine or keyboard yet. I just know it sounds very cool.
- to make recordings that are "demo" quality, "give-to-your-friends" quality, "indie" quality, not necessarily "shop-it-around-to-radio-stations" quality.
- Most of all, I just want it to be easy to use. Easy to play around with and try different things and see what they do without having to know a lot of technical crap. I don't want to have to know *exactly* what I want the song to sound like before I sit down. I want the software to foster a process of experimentation where I can try all kinds of things just to see what happens.
I want recording with the software to be FUN.
Now. I get the feeling I would probably be quite happy with SONAR3 Studio. But do I really gotta pony up 300 whole bucks? Would I be just as happy with one of Cakewalk's "lesser" offerings?
FYI I have the audiophile 2496 sound card if that matters.
(also, yes, I know about student discounts, I'd just feel cheesy getting a student to buy it for me. If it's the software I need I'll pay for it.)
signed,
cheap bastard
- record audio (acoustic&electric guitars, vocals, perhaps one day a cheap drum machine such as the yamaha dd55 and/or a cheap keyboard such as the casio wk3000)
- have a decent selection of good effects
- actually be able to figure out how to use these effects! (e.g. in audacity, if you choose reverb, it just gives you these seven different parameters that you have to choose. how the hell am I supposed to know what numbers to use? YOU'RE the audio expert, dammit! gimme some presets! at least play my track and let me hear how it changes in realtime as I move the sliders around!)
- be able to apply some of those effects to the monitor mix so that I can hear them in real-time in my headphones as I'm recording
- to do simple punch-ins and overdubs, in a simple fashion and also very simply
- maybe to play around with some MIDI stuff. I don't know what exactly I need here since I don't even have the drum machine or keyboard yet. I just know it sounds very cool.
- to make recordings that are "demo" quality, "give-to-your-friends" quality, "indie" quality, not necessarily "shop-it-around-to-radio-stations" quality.
- Most of all, I just want it to be easy to use. Easy to play around with and try different things and see what they do without having to know a lot of technical crap. I don't want to have to know *exactly* what I want the song to sound like before I sit down. I want the software to foster a process of experimentation where I can try all kinds of things just to see what happens.
I want recording with the software to be FUN.
Now. I get the feeling I would probably be quite happy with SONAR3 Studio. But do I really gotta pony up 300 whole bucks? Would I be just as happy with one of Cakewalk's "lesser" offerings?
FYI I have the audiophile 2496 sound card if that matters.
(also, yes, I know about student discounts, I'd just feel cheesy getting a student to buy it for me. If it's the software I need I'll pay for it.)
signed,
cheap bastard