Home studio advice

The place to talk about instruments, tab, the bands gear and anything else musically related.
Post Reply
User avatar
croninburg
Lynch Mob
Posts: 12341
Joined: Sat Feb 12, 2005 3:00 pm
Location: new terrain

Home studio advice

Post by croninburg »

Hello everybody.

I want to put together a home studio so that I can continue to be involved in music independently of my band. I'm lucky enough to be getting a Macbook as a belated birthday present ( :aargh: )

Initially, I just want a set up that will allow me to track instruments individually to some level of quality. The problem is, my knowledge of the products on the market is completely minimal - I've just made up a google shopping list that I reckon will be enough for reasonable drum recording, as well as any other normal small instrument. It looks like this :

Focusrite Saffire Pro 10 I/O firewire card: £295/$550
SM57: £75/$140
SM58: £75/$140
Shure Beta 52A: £150/$280
2 Sennheiser E614: £235/$440
Stands, leads and shit: £100/$185

Grand total: £930 / about $1700

If anyone has any advice in terms of items that you'd consider to be missing or unnecessary, or particuarly cheaper/significantly better value, or any general advice, I'd very much appreciate it.
User avatar
croninburg
Lynch Mob
Posts: 12341
Joined: Sat Feb 12, 2005 3:00 pm
Location: new terrain

Post by croninburg »

Add a couple of pairs of headphones and possibly a condensor to that..
User avatar
Lord of This World
TittySprinkles
Posts: 11540
Joined: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:04 pm
Location: Between your legs, erect.

Post by Lord of This World »

I use a Zoom Handy Recorder. It's fantastic. I've never needed any other kind of microphone or recorder since I got it. I didn't like it at first because I used to layout/mix the tracks on my comp while recording. I've gotten used to doing it after recording now.
stoic wrote:good news...everyone took that at face value and immediately stopped thinking you're a scared dork fuck.
User avatar
croninburg
Lynch Mob
Posts: 12341
Joined: Sat Feb 12, 2005 3:00 pm
Location: new terrain

Post by croninburg »

That looks like a good gadget, but I'm looking for somthing with at least 4 xlr inputs so that I could at least mic a drum kit at the kick and snare with two overheads. I posted this on another forum and somone who works for a music hardware store has already offered to price match on the gear :lol:

Edit: is any of your music online? I'd be interested to hear :tup:
User avatar
long4theblur
King
Posts: 30005
Joined: Fri Feb 11, 2005 3:29 pm

Post by long4theblur »

Not counting my 24" iMac, and the new "producer" computer desk, I think I've put about $3,000 - $3,500 into my studio. My next purchases are going to be some new studio mics and this:

Image

To answer your question, M-Audio is a brand that hasn't done me wrong as far as recording interfaces go. Also, get a BBE Sonic Maximizer. I've got the 882i, but you don't need to go that high to get good results. Get a mic pre-amp, and a compressor with an expander/gate.

FIRST and foremost though, is if you're really dead set on starting a project that you want to build upon, invest in a good power conditioner, with more inputs than you think you'll need. I've got this:

http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/ ... sku=182650

and it's been a godsend, although to be honest with you, I kinda wish I had gone with a bigger one. Now I don't currently have the rackspace to upgrade it, but I'm running out of inputs, and quickly.

I'm sure PFloyd can write a book on this topic as well.
BREATH HOLD!

"And if I leave you, let me leave you entirely un-enthralled. That way, if you remember me years later, it's for good cause and not something completely forced. When I walk that door, I pray for a collective yawn."
User avatar
croninburg
Lynch Mob
Posts: 12341
Joined: Sat Feb 12, 2005 3:00 pm
Location: new terrain

Post by croninburg »

The focusrite soundcard has eight WLR inputs with allegedly decent preamps. The other guitarist in Efflux used one to track most of the instruments for our album, as well as some stuff for other bands, I'm definitely happy to take that as a starting point (I might even appeal to his GAS and try to get him to sell me his and upgrade himself..) I think the BBE maximiser is probably a bit of an extravagane at this stage, I'll definitely look into power conditioners though :tup:
basstard
Creampuff
Posts: 30
Joined: Fri Dec 12, 2008 1:32 am
Location: NY

Post by basstard »

Check cascade microphones, "cheap" and very nice. Look for the fatheads, their best selling mic
Wrona
Mouth For War
Posts: 3248
Joined: Fri Feb 11, 2005 7:37 pm

Re: Home studio advice

Post by Wrona »

croninburg wrote: SM57: £75/$140
SM58: £75/$140
i paid 90 dollars for them mics in america... what the hell? i hope the conversion is wrong, or else your taking it up the ass without lube croninbuddy!
User avatar
PABassPlayer
Lynch Mob
Posts: 16301
Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2006 1:38 pm
Location: Philly PA area

Re: Home studio advice

Post by PABassPlayer »

TK wrote:
croninburg wrote: SM57: £75/$140
SM58: £75/$140
i paid 90 dollars for them mics in america... what the hell? i hope the conversion is wrong, or else your taking it up the ass without lube croninbuddy!

depends which 58 you get.
SM58 - $99.00
SM58 beta - $130.00
[b]"Psycho Gangster"
And why exactly would I change my name to "Schmeagle"?[/b]

[b]"Bukkake Tsunami". My two negro cats are fighting, the one missing a leg is winning.[/b]
User avatar
BabyKiller
Sexual Rubik's Cube
Posts: 13314
Joined: Fri Feb 11, 2005 3:55 pm
Location: Deep 13

Post by BabyKiller »

dear god i didn't know mics were so expensive overseas.
"The world I live in is one where I have five quarrels a day, each with someone who really takes me on over something; and if I can't get into an argument, I go looking for one, to make sure I trust my own arguments, to hone them."
Post Reply