Cullenszoo
New member
When it comes to music gear it's really easy to wake up one day and your gear takes up half a room when it started off just taking up part of a corner. As a guitar player I've gone down that rabbit hole. The same can be said with recording equipment. We've all seen the professional studios with racks and racks of gear and that giant mixing board. It's easy to believe you need all that gear in order to get that professional sound. But you don't.
Rather than commit thousands of dollars to create a home studio I have gone with a minimalist approach:
Laptop: nothing special but you have to have plenty of RAM. 4gb will work but 8 is better.
Recording Interface: I picked up a Lexicon Alpha for $50
Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) I'm running Sonar X3 but Protools is the most common.
That's the heart of the studio. I have some condenser mics, cables, stands, that sort of thing but all the FX etc. are "in the box." Most DAWs come with a load of FX plugins to mix together a professional sound.
Mixing is an ongoing evolution and I'm still learning. A lot of it's subjective but if you have a "vibe" or "sound" you want that makes the song unique, the mixing is where that all happens.
here is a link to my bands reverbnation page where you can hear the songs we've put together.
http://reverbnation.com/atomicempire
On my solo page you can hear the difference as my mixing skills alone changed over time. The list goes from newest to oldest.
http://reverbnation.com/cullen12
Rather than commit thousands of dollars to create a home studio I have gone with a minimalist approach:
Laptop: nothing special but you have to have plenty of RAM. 4gb will work but 8 is better.
Recording Interface: I picked up a Lexicon Alpha for $50
Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) I'm running Sonar X3 but Protools is the most common.
That's the heart of the studio. I have some condenser mics, cables, stands, that sort of thing but all the FX etc. are "in the box." Most DAWs come with a load of FX plugins to mix together a professional sound.
Mixing is an ongoing evolution and I'm still learning. A lot of it's subjective but if you have a "vibe" or "sound" you want that makes the song unique, the mixing is where that all happens.
here is a link to my bands reverbnation page where you can hear the songs we've put together.
http://reverbnation.com/atomicempire
On my solo page you can hear the difference as my mixing skills alone changed over time. The list goes from newest to oldest.
http://reverbnation.com/cullen12