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help setting up a recording studio at home!
Hi guys
I am currently considering setting up a computer based recording studio. I already chose the recording software but when I tried the microphones I bought from currys etc the recording is pretty bad. My idea is to have a small foldable soundproofing booth in the front room, a good quality mike, a good soundcard and perhaps some sort of equip that goes between the mike output and soundcard input ? mixer. If anyone can shine some light on it, I would appreciate it. As you can see I am a newbie to this. Is is a mixer or preamp that I need to be able to connect good quality microphones to the soundcard input! Also my budget for soundcard and microphone is around £200 . If anyone has any suggestions please fire away. It will be used mainly to record voice. Thanks sreekant |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
sreekant wrote:
Hi guys I am currently considering setting up a computer based recording studio. I already chose the recording software but when I tried the microphones I bought from currys etc the recording is pretty bad. My idea is to have a small foldable soundproofing booth in the front room, a good quality mike, a good soundcard and perhaps some sort of equip that goes between the mike output and soundcard input ? mixer. If anyone can shine some light on it, I would appreciate it. As you can see I am a newbie to this. Is is a mixer or preamp that I need to be able to connect good quality microphones to the soundcard input! Also my budget for soundcard and microphone is around £200 . If anyone has any suggestions please fire away. It will be used mainly to record voice. Thanks sreekant I'd take a look at http://www.soundonsound.com for a start. Cheers. James. |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
In article ,
sreekant wrote: Is is a mixer or preamp that I need to be able to connect good quality microphones to the soundcard input! Also my budget for soundcard and microphone is around £200 . If anyone has any suggestions please fire away. It will be used mainly to record voice. Decent voice recording tends to be as difficult a task as most mics ever get - we all have the chance to compare it to the real thing quite easily, after all. Most decent mics suitable for this will be capacitor mics and phantom powered - which usually means using them in conjunction with a suitable mixer, and would be hard to achieve new within your budget. However, good secondhand mics etc are available on the likes of Ebay. I'm not sure about your portable sound proofing booth. It's likely to make the sound very 'boxy'. I'd prefer a slight amount of natural room acoustic - even if this means a slight increase in background sounds, which you're unlikely to eradicate with a booth anyway. Experimenting with the mic distance will give a good compromise. As regards makes for mixer and mics, I'll leave that to others - I'm more used to pro types which will be rather outside your budget. -- *The most common name in the world is Mohammed * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
Most decent mics suitable for this will be capacitor mics and phantom powered - which usually means using them in conjunction with a suitable mixer, and would be hard to achieve new within your budget. However, good secondhand mics etc are available on the likes of Ebay. There are a few mixers under £100. Does anyone know their suitability! They are at http://www.jbsmusic.co.uk/validate07...orig_rowid=525 http://www.jbsmusic.co.uk/validate07...orig_rowid=149 I'm not sure about your portable sound proofing booth. It's likely to make the sound very 'boxy'. I'd prefer a slight amount of natural room acoustic - even if this means a slight increase in background sounds, which you're unlikely to eradicate with a booth anyway. Experimenting with the mic distance will give a good compromise. I was thinking of creating a soundbooth with double layered styrofoam kind of material with dimensions of approx 6ftx8ft. Would it still give boxy sound or would it be fine. I need quite good quality sound but after counting the amount of hours possibly needed for all the voice chaps at studio, the bill seem to run too high, hence the home recording. Thanks sreekant |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
Hi there There are a few mixers under £100. Does anyone know their suitability! They are at http://www.jbsmusic.co.uk/validate07...orig_rowid=525 http://www.jbsmusic.co.uk/validate07...orig_rowid=149 Besides can any one comment on these two below ! http://www.gear4music.com/index.php?...code=STUDIOPB1 http://www.gear4music.com/index.php?...ls&pcode=UB802 I was thinking of creating a soundbooth with double layered styrofoam kind of material with dimensions of approx 6ftx8ft. Would it still give boxy sound or would it be fine. I need quite good quality sound but after counting the amount of hours possibly needed for all the voice chaps at studio, the bill seem to run too high, hence the home recording. Thanks sreekant |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
sreekant wrote:
I was thinking of creating a soundbooth with double layered styrofoam kind of material with dimensions of approx 6ftx8ft. Would it still give boxy sound or would it be fine. I need quite good quality sound but after counting the amount of hours possibly needed for all the voice chaps at studio, the bill seem to run too high, hence the home recording. If you are looking at mixers under 100 pounds then a Soundcraft Folio Notepad is worth looking at. Go to http://www.studiospares.com and browse their cataloge. If you want to improve your acoustics on a tight budget then duvets are apparently the way to go - see most of the Studio SOS articles in Sound On Sound magazine. Styrofoam won't really help much. Cheers. James. |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
"sreekant" wrote in message ... Hi guys I am currently considering setting up a computer based recording studio. I already chose the recording software but when I tried the microphones I bought from currys etc the recording is pretty bad. My idea is to have a small foldable soundproofing booth in the front room, a good quality mike, a good soundcard and perhaps some sort of equip that goes between the mike output and soundcard input ? mixer. If anyone can shine some light on it, I would appreciate it. As you can see I am a newbie to this. Is is a mixer or preamp that I need to be able to connect good quality microphones to the soundcard input! Also my budget for soundcard and microphone is around £200 . If anyone has any suggestions please fire away. It will be used mainly to record voice. Thanks sreekant I don't want to put a damper on your enthusiasm, but I wonder if you will achieve results that will please you on such a shoestring budget. You might be better off renting some time (for vocals at least) in a professional studio with a competent engineer who can offer you a Neumann condenser microphone, a good compressor/limiter, and some realistic sounding reverb for the vocal. Most vocalists perform better when the foldback and monitor reverb for the vocal is "just right" . This takes some skill to achieve. I think you should put yourself in the hands of a professional who knows how to achieve the sound you are looking for. if you have some particular vocal sound in mind, take a CD for the engineer to listen to, and work with him to achieve your goal. Many studios offer "cancelled time" at very cheap rates. By taking advantage of this, you have a much better chance of reaching the standard you are seeking. Cordially, Iain |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
In article ,
sreekant wrote: I need quite good quality sound but after counting the amount of hours possibly needed for all the voice chaps at studio, the bill seem to run too high, hence the home recording. Are you aiming at recording the spoken word (as I assumed), or someone singing? If singing, what type of music? -- *How many roads must a man travel down before he admits he is lost? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
"James Perrett" wrote in message ... sreekant wrote: I was thinking of creating a soundbooth with double layered styrofoam kind of material with dimensions of approx 6ftx8ft. Would it still give boxy sound or would it be fine. I need quite good quality sound but after counting the amount of hours possibly needed for all the voice chaps at studio, the bill seem to run too high, hence the home recording. If you are looking at mixers under 100 pounds then a Soundcraft Folio Notepad is worth looking at. Go to http://www.studiospares.com and browse their cataloge. I agree that the Notepad is very good. The Behringer you mentioned is the right kind of mixer, the earlier 2 were aimed at DJing. Soundcraft also have a new series (see http://www.gear4music.com/index.php?...pcode=RW5677UK on the site you previously mentioned) which apparently have been set up for ease of monitoring when used with computers. However, since you are using a computer, you may find it better to forget the sound card and mixer and go for a dedicated computer interface. I use an M-Audio Firewire 410 (http://www.gear4music.com/index.php?...&pcode=FIRE410 ) with a Mac laptop, but there are cheaper alternatives. I had no idea that the Studio Projects B1 mic was now available for £59. They get a good write up amongst the bedroom studio brigade. I might buy a pair myself. The AKG C1000 is one of the classic mics for recording acoustic instruments but a bit pricey (though not for the performance). Oh and yes, as mentioned before, read Sound on Sound. The website http://www.soundonsound.com allows you to look back at older articles free and is a goldmine of information. There is also an excellent reader's ads section. Roy. |
help setting up a recording studio at home!
Hi
I will try and harass my local studio :-) Thanks a lot sreekant Many studios offer "cancelled time" at very cheap rates. By taking advantage of this, you have a much better chance of reaching the standard you are seeking. Cordially, Iain |
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