A
Arbee
New member
Hi,
I'm new to the forum (obviously!) and plan to start a home studio from scratch this year. I had a 15 year professional music career as a studio musician (piano, keyboards, guitars), arranger/orchestrator and composer but have been away from it for nearly 20 years (in IT/business systems development/management these days).
I've started some fairly intense research and very aware that I could end up with some great gear, but choosing the right equipment and software that will work together easily is perhaps the greatest challenge. I don't want to spend unnecessary time switching screens or overcoming compatibility issues.
I plan to use the studio for 3 main activities - creating film/TV music libraries, recording and mastering my own CD's for retail sale, and creating string quartet arrangements and sim. for online retail sale (including pdf parts/scores and high quality audio demos).
My prerequisites:
1 Compact, I don't have a huge space.
2 Full recording, mixing (say up to 48 tracks) and mastering software suite that will produce professional level results that I could release myself as an indie or take to an external studio for adding live instruments or further enhancements/mastering if necessary. Pro tools 9? Cubase? Which size monitor? Computer specs? (prefer PC but could work with Mac). Speakers?
3 Notation software that I can play into via midi controller and score onto screen and have it play back and record via midi. Sibelius? Finale?
4 Ability to record live acoustic guitar, cello, violin etc, probably just one or two tracks at a time. Mic choice?
5 88 key high quality weighted piano controller keyboard (with headphones at least so I don't have to fire up the whole system just to play with a few ideas) and 49 key touch sensitive controller for orchestral sounds. M-audio? Kurweil? Roland? Yamaha? Kawai?
6 High quality piano sounds (Synthology Ivory?), orchestral library with excellent solo string sounds, percussion and some choral/voice samples (Eastwest? VSL?).
7 Good analog synth library (or separate small synth), especially for keyboard bass.
Any assistance at all from your collective experience would be much appreciated. While I'm more interested in quality than price I'm also keen not to throw money away needlessly. The main outcome I would like is the ability to spend more time on the music and less time on the technology, so it needs to work well together. For example, my research so far gives me the idea that Sibelius works better with Pro Tools than Finale (?), Cubase is more midi-friendly, and that some controllers work better with different software.
Thanks!
Robert (Melbourne)
I'm new to the forum (obviously!) and plan to start a home studio from scratch this year. I had a 15 year professional music career as a studio musician (piano, keyboards, guitars), arranger/orchestrator and composer but have been away from it for nearly 20 years (in IT/business systems development/management these days).
I've started some fairly intense research and very aware that I could end up with some great gear, but choosing the right equipment and software that will work together easily is perhaps the greatest challenge. I don't want to spend unnecessary time switching screens or overcoming compatibility issues.
I plan to use the studio for 3 main activities - creating film/TV music libraries, recording and mastering my own CD's for retail sale, and creating string quartet arrangements and sim. for online retail sale (including pdf parts/scores and high quality audio demos).
My prerequisites:
1 Compact, I don't have a huge space.
2 Full recording, mixing (say up to 48 tracks) and mastering software suite that will produce professional level results that I could release myself as an indie or take to an external studio for adding live instruments or further enhancements/mastering if necessary. Pro tools 9? Cubase? Which size monitor? Computer specs? (prefer PC but could work with Mac). Speakers?
3 Notation software that I can play into via midi controller and score onto screen and have it play back and record via midi. Sibelius? Finale?
4 Ability to record live acoustic guitar, cello, violin etc, probably just one or two tracks at a time. Mic choice?
5 88 key high quality weighted piano controller keyboard (with headphones at least so I don't have to fire up the whole system just to play with a few ideas) and 49 key touch sensitive controller for orchestral sounds. M-audio? Kurweil? Roland? Yamaha? Kawai?
6 High quality piano sounds (Synthology Ivory?), orchestral library with excellent solo string sounds, percussion and some choral/voice samples (Eastwest? VSL?).
7 Good analog synth library (or separate small synth), especially for keyboard bass.
Any assistance at all from your collective experience would be much appreciated. While I'm more interested in quality than price I'm also keen not to throw money away needlessly. The main outcome I would like is the ability to spend more time on the music and less time on the technology, so it needs to work well together. For example, my research so far gives me the idea that Sibelius works better with Pro Tools than Finale (?), Cubase is more midi-friendly, and that some controllers work better with different software.
Thanks!
Robert (Melbourne)