i've been using audacity on previous laptops, but since last year when i got a new one suddenly, i can't get the full-bodied sound of my acoustic guitar out of it anymore. it all sounds excessively 'clean', even 'squeaky clean' in some bits, and there just isn't any resonance in the lower frequencies. someone told me that the particular toshiba satellite i have is notoriously bad, sound-wise, and that i should start by getting a sound card, which i've done but i still can't make a decent recording.
i bought a condenser mic at about the same time, and that gives beautiful full recordings of voice, but the guitar is patchy - comes and goes but fades out towards the end of a recording.
fortunately, i am about to get a new laptop, so could anyone advice me on the best brand to get, and on the simplest set up necessary to make recordings good enough for this message board, without spending too much or taking me too far out of my technological comfort zone?



as a teen-ager i learnt to play the guitar in a style i later saw described in a book by pete seeger called something like 'the fake guitar player'
- really loose rhythms and you break all the rules as you go along for calculated effect - like dylan did, or woody guthrie, or pete seeger himself. it's a style you often find in country singers and folk where you pick it up organically and can't read music and never learned to count the beats/bar. i just belt out the song and bash out a sequence of spontaneously flexible guitar phrases to accompany it. i speed up and slow down, insert irregular pauses for dramatic effect, and get loud and raucous or soft and expressive as the song suggests, with song and voice in sync responding to the flow of feeling in the song. i'm finding it nigh on impossible to adapt to singing to a disciplined accompaniment. like horse and rider - guitar and voice are one in the making of a song. with a pre-recorded guitar line, i either get pedantic and joyless or totally out of sync after the first few bars. even when i get it right i feel like it's not my style of singing, so there's no value for me in sacrificing the freedom of spontaneous variation for technical improvement. i think i might need two microphones, one for voice and another for the guitar. i'll see what i can find. 
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