User not logged in - login - register
Home Calendar Books School Tool Photo Gallery Message Boards Users Statistics Advertise Site Info
go to bottom | |
 Message Boards » » recording audio (hardware/software) Page [1]  
federal
All American
2638 Posts
user info
edit post

so i want to record dialogue in both podcast format and overdubbing for film. currently, i'm using audacity for software, but want to know about professional audio programs (for windows, wish i had a mac).

also, i've found a few good studio microphones, especially in my price range. however, i wanted to know about the best mics in the market, since i'm still pretty ignorant.

7/30/2009 11:19:57 PM

dannydigtl
All American
18302 Posts
user info
edit post

Here ya go: http://www.guitarcenter.com/Blue-The-Bottle-Studio-Condenser-Microphone-270708-i1382903.gc

7/30/2009 11:22:53 PM

evan
All American
27701 Posts
user info
edit post

most everything Blue makes is pretty decent.

personally, i like the Rode NT1-A. you'd also be pretty safe with something like an AT2035. pick up a decent interface like the presonus audiobox, or i think e-mu makes a pretty decent 2-port USB interface.

7/31/2009 12:32:36 AM

dannydigtl
All American
18302 Posts
user info
edit post

i was making a joke about him saying 'the best mics on the market'. i doubt he had $6k in mind. lol at me.

7/31/2009 5:28:48 PM

Nitrocloud
Arranging the blocks
3072 Posts
user info
edit post

What's your capture card at the moment? A decent mic will be better than most built-in audio's noise threshold.

7/31/2009 9:58:50 PM

evan
All American
27701 Posts
user info
edit post

^^but blue doesn't make the best mics on the market that'd be neumann

and believe me, i lol'd.

(p.s. if you want something cheap, the blue snowball is fairly decent)

7/31/2009 11:05:00 PM

ibnuts
Veteran
487 Posts
user info
edit post

I only know of what I've heard people use, but for software, I'd check out Pro Tools, Ableton, and Sony SoundForge/Acid Pro.

8/1/2009 8:12:23 AM

hal2k
New Recruit
1 Posts
user info
edit post

hi,

i have used the blue usb that COD has, and it is okay, but not great. But I am picky.

I recommend buying a nice cheap microphone like a Shure SM-57 or SM-58 - one is complete flat, the other has a midrange bump that sweetens vocals a little bit, but i recommend going with the SM57 because you can EQ and get the same results -- in the end you get a more flexible microphone. every studio has at least a couple of these lying around because they are good, cheap and durable.

For recording, I use a line6 UX2. This has tremendous flexibility for the money -- perhaps more than you need. It uses software modeling of lots of preamps and effect pedals. Just going with one of the presets will do wonders for voice -- like the sunset FM DJ preset. You get a nice preamp, some EQ and a dynamic range compressor. They make a cheaper version that has a single input, but you get the same podfarm software.

Get a mike stand. A table top one is okay, for a very few dollars more you can get a floor model.

Finally -- spend the $25 - $30 for a pop filter. This is super important. It is hard (but not impossible with the application of duct tape) to add one of these to the blue -- and will tame the percussives like "p" and make you sound professional.

before someone points this out -- having a mike with built in usb doesn't get around the fact that the microphone component itself is not digital -- it is analog. it is more a matter of convenience than performance. as i mentioned before -- getting the all in one solution means you have bought a mike you are stuck with -- there is no upgrade path.

later you can invest in other mikes like a cheap condenser.

what i have described is the core of my home studio. yes, it is twice what a blue costs, but makes a fairly dramatic difference in outcome.

8/1/2009 10:49:04 AM

evan
All American
27701 Posts
user info
edit post

lol, a sm58 + ux2 + pop filter is more expensive than a blue mic? maybe the snowball, yes...

8/1/2009 12:51:32 PM

dannydigtl
All American
18302 Posts
user info
edit post

its my understand than an SM58 and an SM57 only differ by their windscreens... ie, take of the '58s windscreen and you have a 57. identical diaphrams/guts/etc.

I bet pros could do more w/ 57s/58s/ than any of us could with a $6k mic. I've alway been perfectly happy w/ my 57s and 58s for my purposes. I also had a Studio Projects B1 condenser that was cheap and fun to play with.

8/2/2009 4:27:50 PM

evan
All American
27701 Posts
user info
edit post

don't get me wrong, i love my beta 58's and sm57's... every studio should have a few of each... but they have their weaknesses

for podcasting, however, a 58 would be more than adequate.

8/2/2009 5:17:47 PM

Nitrocloud
Arranging the blocks
3072 Posts
user info
edit post

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=260453859172&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT

Cheap used SM57

8/2/2009 5:23:40 PM

Nitrocloud
Arranging the blocks
3072 Posts
user info
edit post

http://www.coutant.org/contents.html

8/2/2009 8:28:03 PM

 Message Boards » Tech Talk » recording audio (hardware/software) Page [1]  
go to top | |
Admin Options : move topic | lock topic

© 2024 by The Wolf Web - All Rights Reserved.
The material located at this site is not endorsed, sponsored or provided by or on behalf of North Carolina State University.
Powered by CrazyWeb v2.38 - our disclaimer.