Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

Lux84

New member
I have some questions about the gear, as i am deciding to create some small studio for home recording.

First of all, i have a HP laptop and some bigger 50 watt Genius speakers connected to laptop.

I want to connect the electric guitar to computer, so i need advice about which one of audio interface should i buy. the best value for the money, and i can spend around 100 to 150 € ( 80 to 120 pounds, or 126 to 190 $ ) for the audio interface. which one to buy ?

Then i have another question about headphones.. i can spend from about 80 to 120 € for headphones ( 100 to 150 $, or 100 to 150 pounds ). which one are the best value for the money i have ?

Which brands should i look, which ones to avoid ?

I want to try the Cubase and Guitar Rig software. my music styles are varied, from blues rock, to thrash metal.

Suggestions ? i live in europe, slovenia.

Thanks !
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

A quick google search yielded these lists:

http://www.musicradar.com/us/news/tech/12-of-the-best-budget-usb-audio-interfaces-570850

http://www.audioadapter.net/articles/cheap-audio-interface-home-recording

http://hiphopmakers.com/best-usb-audio-interfaces

Of those listed the only one I have any experience with is an older version of the M-Audio M-Track 2-Channel Portable USB Interface and it is barely tolerable.

The problem is the generic audio drivers.

The problem with almost all digital interfaces are the audio drivers. Once you've established how many inputs you want/need, the biggest issue, IMO, is that the manufacturer produced robust drivers or updates their drivers regularly.

Of the others listed the Akai EIE Pro seemed the most appealing to me, especially since you get Pro Tools Express along with it.

Good luck.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

Re: headphones. It's not a coincidence that many microphone manufacturers also produce headphones; they are virtually the same technology, just in reverse.

So, I would start there: Sennheiser, Shure, Focal, AKG, and Blue all make excellent offerings in your price range.

If you are only recording one instrument at a time, the Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 is a great choice in your price range.

There is no particular recording software for a particular style of music. You can try Reaper for free; a lot of people love it, some not so much; depends on what you are used to, I think. (I'm one of the ones who does not care for Reaper)
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

So, Focusrite, i can get it, it is in local stores in my country.. i must add that i am a rhytm and solo electric guitar playing. so, i would like to improvise throght the recorded tracks and record over it and over it. about programs i am that way of thinking if i would choose one i would like to have some book to learn the program and that's it. i dont want to learn more programs than one, so it is harder to me to choose. but i want something really simple and effective with good sound.

I would like to have headphones on, first record the rhythm, and then record over it solos and lines.. first improvising after the basic track, and then record it. But for having good sound the Guitar Rig is a must ?
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

I will buy the gear in about three weeks, so i have some time to think about it, before i choose. thanks for patience, i am a begginer.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

So, Focusrite, i can get it, it is in local stores in my country.. i must add that i am a rhytm and solo electric guitar playing. so, i would like to improvise throght the recorded tracks and record over it and over it. about programs i am that way of thinking if i would choose one i would like to have some book to learn the program and that's it. i dont want to learn more programs than one, so it is harder to me to choose. but i want something really simple and effective with good sound.

I would like to have headphones on, first record the rhythm, and then record over it solos and lines.. first improvising after the basic track, and then record it. But for having good sound the Guitar Rig is a must ?
You should see if the Focusrite comes with a free version of some recording software. For what you are doing, I think that will be plenty!

As for how you treat the guitar sounds ... that is a whole other discussion. You can go guitar > modeler > interface. Or you can plug straight into the interface and use a software modeler, which means you can change the sounds later.

OR -- you can do both! Just split the guitar's signal and have one input record the guitar directly and the other one will be your modeled tone. Then you can take that direct track and do lots of cool stuff with it later!
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

After looking around a bit more, I agree with the Focusrite stuff as it seems to be the consensus pick for this price point.

I own a pair of Sony MDR-7506 headphones and I like them a lot.

I paid for and use Reaper.

But for having good sound the Guitar Rig is a must
Guitar Rig is nice as is Amplitube, GTR and ReValver, but there are plenty of free VSTs out there.
http://bedroomproducersblog.com/201...best-free-guitar-amp-simulator-vstau-plugins/
http://www.vst4free.com/index.php?plug-ins=Guitar/Amp
http://www.musicradar.com/us/tuition/tech/the-27-best-free-vst-plug-ins-in-the-world-today-277953

Other free VSTs: http://www.producerspot.com/download-best-10-most-popular-free-vst-plug-ins-for-2014

Ambiance reverb: http://magnus.smartelectronix.com/#Ambience

Test drive the plugins with VSTHost: http://hermannseib.com/english/vsthost.htm

ASIO4All: http://www.asio4all.com/
Universal ASIO driver for Windows 32 and 64 bit.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

There are 2 major issues when tracking with VSTs - processing power, as VSTs are HOGS and eat up a ton of CPU, and frequently crash which can either lock up your DAW, PC, or give you a awful bout of howlround ... and latency, which can be very laggy depending on the model in question, your computer, & cet.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

monitors are best for mixing and recording

headphones are ok for tracking though, there really is no such thing as "mixing headphones" since you really need two speakers and have them mix with each other and give you depth perception
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

monitors are best for mixing and recording

headphones are ok for tracking though, there really is no such thing as "mixing headphones" since you really need two speakers and have them mix with each other and give you depth perception
Hmmm ... well, there are lots of guys that mix exclusively on headphones. It has a lot to do with how your ear perceives the cans you have and whether that translates into the real world.

However ... most guys that mix 100% with headphones tend to use very expensive models, such as Beyerdynamic.

Personally .. I suck at mixing that way! Lol I'm a monitor guy. But I know a few guys that turn out great mixes without ever using them!
 
Last edited:
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

You can use headphones to mix as long as they are not "colored" or "juiced up" to sound good. In other words, you want some fairly neutral 'phones such as Sony MDR7506s, and not "Beats by Dr. Dre" or similar that are designed to make listening (not mixing) a pleasure.

The other very key element is you should listen to your mixes on as many items as you can.. such as home stereo, ipod, mp3 players, car stereo. That way you'll hear everything the way a random person who perhaps bought your music and is playing (listening to) it would hear it. If the mix is good, it'll sound good on everything.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

FOOD FOR THOUGHT:

http://www.bluebearsound.com/articles/headphones.html

WHAD'YA MEAN I CAN'T MIX WITH HEADPHONES????
by Bruce Valeriani, Mar 2003
On many of the recording forums I participate or moderate on, this question comes up time and again. While it's understandable when recording novices raise the question, even more intermediate recordists don't seem able to grasp the limitations on the use of headphones (also known as 'cans') in the studio.

Here's what headphones ARE useful for -
• critical listening for noises/click/pops (that sometimes aren't obvious on monitors)
• sonic flaws on individual tracks or mixes
• monitoring during tracking where the use of monitors would cause unwanted bleed
That's it.

"Hey! You left out mixing....!!"
Funny how that worked out, considering the title of the article...
The truth is, headphones ARE NOT good for mixing. I repeat - headphones ARE NOT good for mixing. As a matter of fact, headphones don't make good tools at all for ANY sonic decisions with respect to EQ or tonal changes.

"What are you talking about? Headphones take the room out of the equation, so it should make my mixes sound more consistent."
Well... it's easy to see why someone might beleive that, but they don't have all the information. Audio production, in general, is full of techniques/processes that may at first appear to be common sense, but turn out to be the completely-wrong approach. While it's true that headphones DO take the room out of the equation, they also put your ears into two individual and very small, separate rooms all their own!

This leads to two issues...

1) Proximity and isolation - in using headphones, both your sense of stereo imaging and frequency response change... imaging is exaggerated due to the isolation of one ear from the other, and frequency response gets skewed in the bass and mid-range areas due to the proximity of the drivers to the ear. So you can't be sure of the relative levels of frequencies in that area of the spectrum.

Don't believe me? Try a simple test...
- slap a pair of headphones on a decent-sounding synth/keyboard and find a patch you think sounds good through the phones.
- now take the cans off and play that exact patch back through using monitors.

95% of the time you will hear a huge difference and the choice you made using headphones won't sound quite right played back on monitors, although it may have sounded excellent on the cans. Now imagine the same thing except with something as complex-sounding as a mix!

As a matter of fact, try it - mix something using ONLY headphones, and then mix it again with monitors. The headphone mix will almost always be way-off in terms of sonic balance.


2) Same headphones, different people - not only is response and imaging skewed using headphones, but to make matters worse, each person hears differently from every other person when listening on cans. The reason for this is that the response of each person's cilia (the parts of the ear responsible for detecting different frequency vibrations) is unique to each individual. This is critical because it means that the same song, through the same phones, will sound different to each person that listens to it! And you thought translating mixes using monitors is tough!!! With headphones it's almost impossible because a well-balanced sound is a moving target from person to person!

"But wait.... so what if the response is different for each person, why is that any different from monitors?"
That's a good question - it shows you're thinking - but there's a huge difference.... the "personalized-response" effect is much more pronounced with headphones due to the proximity of the cones to a person's ears. With monitors, the room acts as a frequency-response leveler, giving a more uniform response to each person hearing them, but with headphones, it's virtually direct contact between ears and the cones, there's no room effect to "level-out" the response.

The bottom line is... headphones are tools. Like any tool, there's a fairly well-defined set of tasks they are appropriate for. You can try to use a screwdriver to hammer a nail, but it won't be very effective.

Headphones have equally well-defined uses - checking for low-level noises, small ticks/pops, and other details - but NOT for use as a mechanism upon which to base any sort of sonic/tonal decision... which naturally includes mixing!

So save your pennies... get a second job... borrow yet again from your family... but you NEED to get a pair of studio monitors to work with. Even budget monitors will serve you better than trying to mix with headphones! Your mixes will thank you.

Happy Recording!

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bruce Valeriani is the owner/mix engineer of Blue Bear Sound in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

That Bruce Valeriani article is very biased.

Even though I don't mix with headphones, I almost completely disagree with everything he wrote in that article lol. Of COURSE something will sound different from cans to monitors, just as it will sound different between different pairs of cans.

The point is whether you know your own ears well enough to work around the hardware limitations -- regardless of what your mains are -- to produce a mix that sounds, not 'good' on everything it is played back on (because 'good' is subjective), but CONSISTENT. And the cans are not to blame, it's your EARS and the way they correlate the info from the cans that is different from monitors and whether YOUR BRAIN can compensate correctly.

If your mix sounds 'great' in your cans but 'terrible' on your hifi (and I recently had this very experience), this is not a 'good/bad' issue; it's a consistency issue.

But to say universally that X is better than Y (summing in analog is another hot topic, as is recording with sample rates greater that 44.1, and mono compatibility) is just foolish.
 
Last edited:
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

Ok, guys.. for the beggining i've just orderd Roland Duo-Capture USB Audio Interface (UA-11), and i have found in my closet some old US-Blaster Over The Ear headphones. also i 've found Shure microphone and connect cable for it :) for the start i will stick with that Roland. then buy some better headphones. Than if the Roland UA-11 will not satisfy my needs of recording and editing, i will buy a Focusrite or Steinberg, maybe even Roland UA-22.

I have one more question.. that UA-11 comes with Sonar LE software, is that software easy to achieve as a begginer ?

Thanks.
 
Re: Home Studio Recording Gear Questions

Yes, Sonar LE is a great DAW and has a much softer learning curve than something like Cubase.

The Duo-Capture is a very nice piece, too!
 
Back
Top