Nico wrote:I looked up the stuff that Janet mentioned, but that is way too expensive for me, but thanks for the info because it gives me an idea of the sort of things I might need.
Corwen, thank you for those tons of details.
Allow me to tell you where I am aiming at.
At the moment my setup is really really simple. One Samson CO1U studio condenser mic directly plugged into a usb port on a laptop running Windows. I have no idea what a condenser mic' is, but you mentioned it and it is written on my mic, so I may be safe there ;-). It gets its power through the usb port. We have two headphones that seem to work okay, I don't think they spill into the mic, at least I never noticed that.
Thats an interesting mic, that essentially includes its own
audio interface. 48khz isn't great (88.2 is more standard these days) but its ok. Seems a shame that you can't use it as a normal mic into an external DAI, still its a large condenser so thats the best thing to have for your music where the vocals is the main thing. Good you have reasonable headphones, they do make a difference.
Nico wrote:The music that we make is rather simple also. Usually 1 or 2 accoustic guitars (which I can't plug in), 2 vocals and some sound effects. Sometimes a flute or tambourine. (but we found that recording the tambourine is hard). I don't want to get too far away from what we can do live, so usually I end up with only two recorded tracks. The first one the lead guitar and lead vocals, second one with second voice, sound effects, guitar solos. But sometimes I just like to add tracks and effects to a song to see where it ends up.
I downloaded Reaper, and that seems to work nicely. (not sure if I will buy it, because I already bought Sony ACID).
I think you'll find Reaper does so much more than Acid that you'll end up using that full time (I also have Sony Acid and never use it these days). If you were to break down your recording into more tracks, ie separate tracks for each element, then you'd be able to mix them against each other and apply different effects to each track, pan the vocals apart from the guitar etc and the final sound will be a million times better with no more effort. Audacity is reasonable for recording
audio and for basic multitracking, but in no way is a fully featured Digital
Audio Workstation. Learn to use Reaper and the time will be rewarded.
Nico wrote:Let me explain what sort of quality I am aiming at.
Not really fully professional
audio, but we have been asked to make a cd a number of times now. So far we refused, because we want to give away our music for free (we simply play it at eistedfodds). But we are now considering making a cd anyway and give an anti-commerce statement by selling it as cheap as possible (like 2 or 3 euros). But we may want a somewhat better sound quality than we have now.
Even with two tracks I get some audible noise now.
This is an example of the quality I have now. The first one is 2 tracks (noisy).
http://uilennest.net/sounds/WanderingAe ... ep2010.mp3The second one is just a single track, but at some point near the end Ingeborg sings along as backing vocals, but because she has a louder voice than me she sings further from our only mic than me. But it doesn't sound right.
http://uilennest.net/sounds/WanderingAe ... ep2010.mp3
Your tracks are so noisy that something must be fundamentally wrong with your setup. Digital recording, with a reasonable mic like the one you have, should be more or less noise free, there should be no audible white noise. I suspect something is wrong with the routing of the
audio in your machine, possibly involving a conflict between the mics own software and the soundcard, or possibly you have the gain turned up really high to compensate for a low signal elsewhere, anyhow its too involved to get into here. I suggest you describe your setup and ask people on the Reaper forum, it really should be lots better than it is! You should be able to have at least 20 tracks running at once on your machine with no noise!
Nico wrote:So, it seems that I should focus on the DAI then right? One with two inputs that has phantom power. I guess a recording using two inputs ends up as a single track in Reaper?
No, if you have a Digital
Audio Interface with several inputs, you will be able to control the level of the signal of each input separately in the software that came with the DAI. Then in Reaper you create a separate track for each mic or instrument, arm each for recording and in the drop down section select the relevant input. Thus each mic or instrument, plugged into a different input on the DAI, ends up recorded to a different track in Reaper. The important thing is to get the levels right (controlled in the DAI software or possibly with a knob on the front of the DAI) so it neither peaks nor is too low, should average between around -12db and -18db and not go above 0db. The Reaper manual (the free one at the top of the page here:
http://www.reaper.fm/userguide.php) should talk you through the whole process, but this way you can simultaneously record several tracks of
audio in good quality.
For example, this is a typical setup for recording a single person playing and singing. I have a DAI with four inputs. One takes the large condenser for vocals, then two are for a stereo pair of small condensers which record the sound of the guitar (one is pointed at the guitar bridge and one at the fretboard). The fourth is for the pickup of the guitar, this has to go into a £25 DI box which stops the phantom power from destroying the guitar pickup, which doesn't require it, and converts the pickups unbalanced instrument level signal into a balanced mic level signal the DAI can handle. All of these signals end up on separate tracks where they can be mixed and balanced to give a good sound. Listen to Close my Eyes or Beyond the Silence on our website to hear how this sounds (
http://ancientmusic.co.uk/sounds.html). I could just as easily use my setup for two singers each playing an instrument, recording both voices and both instruments (though they'll only get either one mic or their pickup which will sound less rich) onto separate tracks. The advantage of doing this sort of recording with everyone singing and playing at once is it sounds really 'real', the bad thing is that the mics get a bit of everything, not just the thing they are pointing at (this is called spill) which makes it hard to snip out mistakes or apply effects to each thing differently.
Anyway I'd try and get what you've got working for now, you should be able to do a lot with the kit you have, at least get a noise free recording and learn to use Reaper, before you splash out on more kit that, unless you sort out the
audio issues with your laptop/mic is unlikely to work any better!
One last thing about reaper is that it allows you to have a go at mastering (what the author of the Reamix guide calls 'pseudo-mastering'), once you have produced some noise free tracks you are happy with get the Reamix guide (I think you have to buy it from LULU) and work through the mastering stages. This will make such a difference to your tracks, make them as loud and present as commercially produced tracks, that you'll be amazed!