Blue Bear Sound said:
Good luck....... you'll need it.....
I have to back Blue Bear 100%.
There are *thousands* of things that can potentially bunge up your recording--least of which are your EARS... which I can *guarantee* you are not 1/10th as developed as any professional audio engineer on this forum (there are a number of us at varying levels). I mean, what do you do about -4 versus +10 gear? What about eliminating ground loops and hum? Will a dynamic give you the snare sound you want, or do you need to look at condensors? Will the condensor even take the SPL generated from the snare hit?
Even subtle mix things can screw you up. Do you know how to calculate milliseconds of delay versus a tempo so things are in time? How much reverb is 'too much'? How the heck can you get rid off that annoying hissssss that happens every time your singer pronounces a sibilant?
It may just look like setting some mics up in front of stuff and adjusting audio levels, but trust me--there's a whole world out there of important issues that all effect your audio. To think that you could absorb 1/10th of what you need to know in a semester class is laughable.
Also, expect to spend at least 1000 bucks if you want to record drums with more than three microphones. Trust me, 1000 bucks is nothing in the recording world. Heck, a good gate (Drawmer PunchGate) costs a thousand bucks!
Even quality plugins will rip your budget up. A UAD-1 card with all the nice stuff is 900 bucks, the basic UAD-1 is 500. A TC Powercore is 500 bucks, and another 900 if you want the Sony Oxford plugs. Waves plugins aren't cheap either--a starter set will set you back about 500 bucks and Waves Diamond (which is what you'd need to track/mix/master) is 2850 bucks! JUST FOR THE SOFTWARE.
OUCHHHH!!!!
Honestly, the bare minimum of a setup that will produce average results would be something like:
Alesis Monitor 1's - nearfield monitors (200 bucks)
Mackie CR1604 - 16 channel/4 buss mixer (250 bucks)
Fostex VF-16 - 16 track 16 bit hard disk recorder (350 bucks)
Shure SM57 (4) - dynamic cardoid mic (90 each)
AKG D112 (1) - dynamic cardoid mic (175 bucks)
AKG C2000 (2) - large diaphragm condensor mic (200 each)
Adobe Audition - mixing/mastering/wave editing software (250 bucks)
UAD-1 - DSP card + plugins (500 bucks)
$2485 bucks please.
I didn't even factor in decent cabling (about 100 bucks minimum), headphones and distribution amplifiers, sound diffusors/absorbers, DI boxes, power conditioners, racks OR a computer sufficiently powerful and tweaked to process your audio.
The SM57's would be on snare and toms, the D112 on kick leaving the 2 C2000's for overheads. For bass use a direct signal (you know how to set that up right???) and the D112 on the amp. For guitar I'd recommend an off-axis SM57 and C2000 about 3-4' back from the amp. For vocals use either a SM57 or C2000 depending.
By all means we all started somewhere, but if you don't have an overriding passion for recording, an affinity for technology, electronics and low-level physics, an obsession with equipment I would recommend leaving this job up to the professionals. It will be cheaper in money and time spent.