D
dans595
New member
Dear all,
I will try to be terse for the sake of concision and consideration of your time.
I used to record with a) iPhone headphone microphone, b) MacBook Pro built in mic, c) $75 condenser USB mic (no longer have it), d) "Rock Band" Xbox mic. The results never varied - I always got ambient noise in excess. I started in GarageBand and moved to Logic Pro.
Looked into it, ended up buying:
- Avid Fast Trak Studio aka M-Audio MKII Fast Trak ($89, on sale.)
- Sterling SP50/30 recording mic set. ($50, on sale.)
- 5 foot XLR cable
Recorded vocals in a walk in closet lined with coats, pillows, etc, with MacBook Pro outside of the door sandwiched between pillows and all appliances and lights switched off. Noticed an improvement, but I'm still unhappy.
Worse, I tried this setup again and I can't even reproduce the decent stuff the first couple of times I recorded. For reference my Fast Trak has an XLR input, a knob that controls that input's level, an output, and a knob that controls the output level. When the Fast Trak is plugged into my Mac, all of Logic's output comes through the output on the Fast Trak.
- As I adjust the level of the output knob on the Fast Trak the volume changes erratically - a tiny change can cause the volume to spike, turn to pure static/crackling, to drop out entirely, etc.
- The static level is too high. I recorded some, and I even turned the input knob all the way down (which should silence the input entirely) there is still static recorded. (I tried listening to it with the system's built in output to verify that this was not just a problem of the Fast Trak's output port.)
- With the other microphone from the recording set, I turned the input knob on the Fast Trak all the way down and it didn't effect the microphone's volume at all. (??)
- When working in projects with more than a few tracks, the Fast Trak's output doesn't pick them all up, adds weird reverb to other tracks, and everything basically sounds like it's coming from a miniature speaker inside of a tin can, etc.
So many things are wrong with it now (that weren't the first time I used it!!) that I am wondering if somehow my Fast Trak broke. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Kindly,
Dan
I will try to be terse for the sake of concision and consideration of your time.
I used to record with a) iPhone headphone microphone, b) MacBook Pro built in mic, c) $75 condenser USB mic (no longer have it), d) "Rock Band" Xbox mic. The results never varied - I always got ambient noise in excess. I started in GarageBand and moved to Logic Pro.
Looked into it, ended up buying:
- Avid Fast Trak Studio aka M-Audio MKII Fast Trak ($89, on sale.)
- Sterling SP50/30 recording mic set. ($50, on sale.)
- 5 foot XLR cable
Recorded vocals in a walk in closet lined with coats, pillows, etc, with MacBook Pro outside of the door sandwiched between pillows and all appliances and lights switched off. Noticed an improvement, but I'm still unhappy.
Worse, I tried this setup again and I can't even reproduce the decent stuff the first couple of times I recorded. For reference my Fast Trak has an XLR input, a knob that controls that input's level, an output, and a knob that controls the output level. When the Fast Trak is plugged into my Mac, all of Logic's output comes through the output on the Fast Trak.
- As I adjust the level of the output knob on the Fast Trak the volume changes erratically - a tiny change can cause the volume to spike, turn to pure static/crackling, to drop out entirely, etc.
- The static level is too high. I recorded some, and I even turned the input knob all the way down (which should silence the input entirely) there is still static recorded. (I tried listening to it with the system's built in output to verify that this was not just a problem of the Fast Trak's output port.)
- With the other microphone from the recording set, I turned the input knob on the Fast Trak all the way down and it didn't effect the microphone's volume at all. (??)
- When working in projects with more than a few tracks, the Fast Trak's output doesn't pick them all up, adds weird reverb to other tracks, and everything basically sounds like it's coming from a miniature speaker inside of a tin can, etc.
So many things are wrong with it now (that weren't the first time I used it!!) that I am wondering if somehow my Fast Trak broke. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Kindly,
Dan