B
bmerry8
New member
Hi all,
I am new to home recording, and not great at understanding sound tech, but I would really appreciate some advice because I'm not sure how to move forward.
I have and AKG D5 microphone, and a Shure X2u USB interface. I am using Audacity for recording.
I have set up my mic, interface, software etc according to the X2u instructions, as well as according to Audacity's own instructions on how to use an X2u with this software.
The first problem I have is that even with the X2u gain cranked right up, and with the input levels turned right up in Audacity, and with the mic about 1/2 inch from my face, the input level from the mic is reaaaaally low - about -48db max. i have checked the input levels for my soundcard - all up as high as they can go.
So I tried recording at this really low level anyway, and normalising the recording in audacity afterwards. This produced a horrible amount of hiss, and sounded really bad.
I tried using audacity's noise reduction feature, but this just made the recording sound wierd.
I looked all over the internet for a way to reduce the hiss. One thing I someone recommented was to turn the input level in audacity right down to 1 or 2, and then turn the gain on the X2u right up. This helped a little, but not enough to be left with a good quality recording once the low levels had been normalised.
So my questions that I would really like help with are these:
1. Am I using the wrong kind of microphone? Are the output levels of the AKG D5 too low for home recording even with the X2u preamp, and should I get a condenser mic instead? If so, which is a good, cheap one?
2. Is the hiss being generated by the X2u? I have heard other people complaining that USB interfaces can generate hiss. But if this is the case then why are they so popular? Should I get a different interface?
Thank you all for your help, I don't know much about this but just want to make a good quality home recording of my music (singe-songwriter type vocals and guitar).
P.S. - I would appreciate if answers are not in tech-speak, where possible, because this just makes me more confused ! Cheers!
I am new to home recording, and not great at understanding sound tech, but I would really appreciate some advice because I'm not sure how to move forward.
I have and AKG D5 microphone, and a Shure X2u USB interface. I am using Audacity for recording.
I have set up my mic, interface, software etc according to the X2u instructions, as well as according to Audacity's own instructions on how to use an X2u with this software.
The first problem I have is that even with the X2u gain cranked right up, and with the input levels turned right up in Audacity, and with the mic about 1/2 inch from my face, the input level from the mic is reaaaaally low - about -48db max. i have checked the input levels for my soundcard - all up as high as they can go.
So I tried recording at this really low level anyway, and normalising the recording in audacity afterwards. This produced a horrible amount of hiss, and sounded really bad.
I tried using audacity's noise reduction feature, but this just made the recording sound wierd.
I looked all over the internet for a way to reduce the hiss. One thing I someone recommented was to turn the input level in audacity right down to 1 or 2, and then turn the gain on the X2u right up. This helped a little, but not enough to be left with a good quality recording once the low levels had been normalised.
So my questions that I would really like help with are these:
1. Am I using the wrong kind of microphone? Are the output levels of the AKG D5 too low for home recording even with the X2u preamp, and should I get a condenser mic instead? If so, which is a good, cheap one?
2. Is the hiss being generated by the X2u? I have heard other people complaining that USB interfaces can generate hiss. But if this is the case then why are they so popular? Should I get a different interface?
Thank you all for your help, I don't know much about this but just want to make a good quality home recording of my music (singe-songwriter type vocals and guitar).
P.S. - I would appreciate if answers are not in tech-speak, where possible, because this just makes me more confused ! Cheers!