
mikemorgan
panned out
When a newbie like me enters the Homerecording.com website looking for help and advice about gear, we pretty much get the same advice on all fronts.
1. Get a good mic
2. Get a good mic pre-amp
3. Optimize your signal path to recording medium of your choice
4. Don't skimp on Monitors
5. Educate yourself (using the Internet makes it easier than ever)
The one thing that everyone has forgotten to mention, until recently, is to accoustically and sonically treat your room so all the other stuff you bought will not sound like crap.
It seems like that should be the first valuable piece of advice anyone could impart. Once you realize how daunting of a task this is, and how little you really understand about the subject, you might just want to go ahead and pay the big-buck studios to record your little demo. People like Blue Bear and Massivemaster prove to me that I don't have a clue.
I do appreciate all the Pro advice that appears on this board. I have climbed the ladder of recording knowledge gradually as a result. I have upgraded parts of my studio as needed. I have learned so many things. But I really expected that buying good monitors would get me close to personal-studio nirvana. Still waiting.
Maybe if I had treated my room first, I wouldn't need all this other crap.
1. Get a good mic
2. Get a good mic pre-amp
3. Optimize your signal path to recording medium of your choice
4. Don't skimp on Monitors
5. Educate yourself (using the Internet makes it easier than ever)
The one thing that everyone has forgotten to mention, until recently, is to accoustically and sonically treat your room so all the other stuff you bought will not sound like crap.
It seems like that should be the first valuable piece of advice anyone could impart. Once you realize how daunting of a task this is, and how little you really understand about the subject, you might just want to go ahead and pay the big-buck studios to record your little demo. People like Blue Bear and Massivemaster prove to me that I don't have a clue.
I do appreciate all the Pro advice that appears on this board. I have climbed the ladder of recording knowledge gradually as a result. I have upgraded parts of my studio as needed. I have learned so many things. But I really expected that buying good monitors would get me close to personal-studio nirvana. Still waiting.
Maybe if I had treated my room first, I wouldn't need all this other crap.