 |
|
|
|
 |
Alekos
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jul 2003
Location: George is on
|
|
|
Sep-08-2003 13:11
|
|
|
 |
 |
dstrukt
TSN - Exerciser of souls

Registered: Jul 2001
Location: London
|
|
|
Sep-08-2003 22:26
|
|
|
 |
 |
bachatu
A Trance Of Thought

Registered: May 2001
Location: South Florida
|
|
|
Re: What program do you use to record your mixes?
| quote: | Originally posted by liquidmist2001
... Also, i was wondering if changing my sound card would help at all. currently, i'm using the sound card that came on my motherboard, probably just a basic soundblaster something. if you guys have an idea of a better sound card please let me know. i'd love to hear from you guys.
thanx
vipal |
Yes, changing the sound card will make a difference. THe sound cards that come integrated with system boards are not meant to do studi/audio work, most arent even 16bit.
A cheap alternative in getting something better would be a sound blaster live, as you can get one for about 40-50 bucks online.
If you want something that is more studio quality like, you can buy yourself a 24bit sound card, such as an M-Audio one, for as little as $150. Then you can record in 24bit/96kHz.
It all depends on your budget and how good quality of recordings you want.
When you are referring to home production, what are you recording from? What is your source?
If its mixing from Turntables, then keep in mind that if you get a great sound card, it wont help if you have crap needles. If your source has shitty quality, the program and sound card will record shitty quality.
In terms of programs, Ive used Sound Forge, Cool Edit Pro and currently Wavelab by steinberg. If your recording in 16bit, Id go with Cool Edit Pro. Quality is just as good, but the features are insane, and its easy to use. If your doing 24bit recording, Id go with Wavelab or Sound Forge (as cool edit pro does not support 24 bit recording).
Minidisc? portable? I wouldnt get one if its quality that your after. CD quality is still better as it uses less compression.
|
|
Sep-08-2003 23:01
|
|
|
 |
 |
JohnSmith
Agent Smith

Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Kamloops
|
|
|
Soundforge 6.0 is what i use.
As for a MD, they are allright, very convenient to use, but you WILL lose sound quality due to the ATRAC compression. It's OK for making CDs for the car, or to hand out to friends, but if you want a full quality CD release, i reccomend going straight to the computer.
One MAJOR problem and misconception of MD is that you can record it analog and then transfer to the computer digitally. you CAN'T do this, at least not on SONY ones. they have deliberately engineered it so that you can not transfer analogue recorded material digitally. They did this to thwart copyright infringement.
The only way to get your mix off the MD onto the computer is to play it out the headphone jack of the MD (introducing another digital to analog conversion), then in the line in of your sound card (converting back to digital) and record (with soundforge or whatever you use). This also means if you have an hour long mix, you have to wait an hour while it transfers, and preferably not use your computer during this time to make sure it doesn't skip or anything.
So, you have to record analog with your computer anyway, may as well just record it straight into your sound card in the first place, unless of course, like me, your decks and computer are in different places and you can't do this.
Another disadvantage of MD is that your recording time is limited to only 80 minutes in standard mode. Enough to record a single CD, but if you want to record a long mix, you have to use LP or LP2 compression, both which degrade the sound (LP2 is especially bad, it removes a large amount of the bass, and is very noticeably lacking)
If you use LP you can get 2 hours 40 minutes, and in 2LP mode, you can get 5 hours 20 minutes, which still wouldn't be enough, say to record a whole party or something.
with a computer, you are limited only by the size of your harddrive, and you can record straight to it, without a lossy intermediate step.
As for soundcards, you mobo soundcard is definitely not of high quality. I would suggest an M-Audio 24/96 for recording, that's what i plan on getting.
http://www.m-audio.net/products/m-audio/audiophile.php

___________________

Visit my site Antiwar Homepage
|
|
Sep-08-2003 23:05
|
|
|
 |
 |
liquidmist2001
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Mar 2002
Location: LATA #75 (cerritos), OCTA #20 (irvine)
|
|
|
the m-audio is a good idea, but i'll have to wait on getting that, but i'm not sure how good the sound quality would be overall, also, wondering about what program specifically to use, i don't like soundforge, someone told me about cakewalk sonar, and i will be trying that next, if any good comes out of it i'll let you guys know, thanx for the advice though, that card looks to be pretty good
|
|
Sep-08-2003 23:11
|
|
|
 |
All times are GMT. The time now is 03:51.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|