
six
New member
hi guys
a friend of mine wants to start out with pc-based recording. we've been to a music-shop and this friend then made the mistake to ask the guy there if they also had soundblasters... hehehe.
"oh nooooooo, we don't sell crap like that. that's ok for gamers but you won't get any good recordings with that... soundblaster? we don't even know things like that!"
the shop assistant first showed my friend a "cheap beginner's card" for about 4 times the price a soundblaster would be.
no doubt: the connections sure are better and of course you get the possibility to record more than two tracks (or one stereo) at the same time - which my friend does not need to. and yes, the a/d convertors are better.
my friend told the assistant that this was still a lot of money and a lot of things he wouldn't need, and - and there I totally agree - either he wanted to start out cheaper or get the REAL thing for the big money, which he doesn't have of course... so there was only the first way.
the assistant then showed him a soundcard that was yet only the price of 3 soundblasters. at that point I wondered why he didn't show him that thing before. i mean - who do they have these cards for if not for the ones that say "I'm a beginner, I want to start cheap."? for the ones that say: i'll probably never record anything and i'm quite sure i'll never need a soundcard."
anyway. there was no deal at that music-store. now what i'm still wondering about is: would these lowest-budget "real" soundcard's a/d converters still be better than the ones of a soundblaster?
man, I'd really like to hear the exact same thing recorded once thru a soundblaster and once thru this "i'm produced by a famous musical interface company"-card.... and I bet that if someone hears a difference (in the way that one can say the sb is worse) that someone sure wouldn't be that shop assistant. ;-) !!
what do you guys think?
any samples?
can the bucks invested in a soundblaster be lost at all?
a friend of mine wants to start out with pc-based recording. we've been to a music-shop and this friend then made the mistake to ask the guy there if they also had soundblasters... hehehe.
"oh nooooooo, we don't sell crap like that. that's ok for gamers but you won't get any good recordings with that... soundblaster? we don't even know things like that!"
the shop assistant first showed my friend a "cheap beginner's card" for about 4 times the price a soundblaster would be.
no doubt: the connections sure are better and of course you get the possibility to record more than two tracks (or one stereo) at the same time - which my friend does not need to. and yes, the a/d convertors are better.
my friend told the assistant that this was still a lot of money and a lot of things he wouldn't need, and - and there I totally agree - either he wanted to start out cheaper or get the REAL thing for the big money, which he doesn't have of course... so there was only the first way.
the assistant then showed him a soundcard that was yet only the price of 3 soundblasters. at that point I wondered why he didn't show him that thing before. i mean - who do they have these cards for if not for the ones that say "I'm a beginner, I want to start cheap."? for the ones that say: i'll probably never record anything and i'm quite sure i'll never need a soundcard."
anyway. there was no deal at that music-store. now what i'm still wondering about is: would these lowest-budget "real" soundcard's a/d converters still be better than the ones of a soundblaster?
man, I'd really like to hear the exact same thing recorded once thru a soundblaster and once thru this "i'm produced by a famous musical interface company"-card.... and I bet that if someone hears a difference (in the way that one can say the sb is worse) that someone sure wouldn't be that shop assistant. ;-) !!
what do you guys think?
any samples?
can the bucks invested in a soundblaster be lost at all?