Hello Steemians!
I hope you a great holiday celebration and enjoyment.
I have been rather busy with other things and haven't been too present lately, so I intend to change that right now ;)
As some of you know I am a singer songwriter and I work out of my own home studio. The road getting here has been long and very interesting, and it has brought me a lot of enjoyment as well as a lot of trial and error.
A couple weeks a go the great @chaifm replied to a reply I made on one of her songwriters challenge entries, this one to be more specific:
https://steemit.com/openmic/@chaifm/open-mic-songwriters-week-5-or-wind-swept-shores
She suggested that I made some posts about my studio, and about recording, Ableton live, and mistakes and achievements from which I have learned, and I thought that was a great Idea, so here is the first one of many!
This is meant for musicians who don't know much about recording, or people who aren't satisfied with the quality of sound they are getting from their equipment (Hallo @miguelarl ;-)
Recording...... well, one thing is for sure, it is way easier now than it was 20 years ago, back then you had to own really big and expensive pieces of equipment and/or get someone on a professional studio to mentor you to really learn the trade. Now a mentor-ship would help immensely now, of course, but it is not strictly necessary.
Today you can get a couple of pieces of inexpensive equipment and learn how to use them well enough to be able to record, mix and master you own music. This is almost magical to me. people like Skrillex made their way into the mainstream with little more than a computer, a midi keyboard and great ideas.
So... you are a musician, you write songs that "bewitch the mind and ensnare the senses" of those who listen, and suddenly you realize that it would be great to have your songs recorded but you have no money at all, and you have no Idea on how to record or mix something, you don't know the first thing about recording equipment, but you want to learn.... been there, done that, which is why I'm here to help.
Let's start at the beginning, to make a recording you need:
A microphone:
It can be the most expensive one, or the cheapest one there is, if you are reading this and don't know about recording, we'll assume the latter.
An Audio interface
You will need a preamplifier and a analog to digital converter, or in none-geek speak, an audio Interface, if this seems like some weird language, don't worry, it isn't too complicated, basically any audio interface does both things.
A computer:
Doesn't have to be the most expensive one, you just need something that runs smoothly. more current ones will make things easier down the line.
A DAW (or Digital audio workstation or the app you use to get the music in the computer)
Some software like Protools, or Cubase or Logic pro (if you own a mac). There is great variety from which to choose from, I currently use Presonus' Studio One, Ableton Live and Reaper (this is a really cheap and solid piece of software).
It is really important to note that on this day and age, what software you use doesn't really matter regarding audio quality, it only matters how well you know the software and if you will share the recording and mixing project with someone else, especially in the beginning.
A pair of headphones:
Ideally some flat response headphones would be nice, but you can manage with almost anything you have within reach (apple earbuds work for recording as we have seen on many videos here on Steemit, but I wouldn't recommend them for mixing).
These days there are so many options for every single piece of equipment, I would argue that you should just pick a bundle and start, I prefer focusrite's bundles in general, they come with everything you need, everything but the computer, plus they giveaway great plugins every month to anyone who own their gear and registers it on their site!
This post is meant only to make sure you understand what equipment is needed to make a recording, from what I've heard there are many people interested in getting better at recording and getting a better audio quality from their recordings. This doesn't stop here, I will be writing many more post about these topics, if you have any question about this, feel free to ask away, next post won't be as long, this one is way too long! :-P
Lastly, 9gag taught me Long post = potato sooooo......
Till my next post!!
My current setup for those interested is Linux KXStudio (A free operating system with the creative musician in mind) with Bitwig installed (DAW) using an Audient id14 (Audio interface) and a shure sm57 (mic) My laptop is an ASUS, probably cost £350 brand new and it does a decent job!
Those are perfect for recording and getting creative! Have you made any music with it?
I posted my first dsound track just last night,
https://steemit.com/dsound/@thesimpson/will-simpson-dawning-instrumental
Cool!, I'll check it out!
ajja buenisimas las fotos!
Jajajajaja, seeeeh, me rei mucho cuando encontre la de los auriculares :)
amaaaazing! I am so happy you wrote this post - going to read it now! :))))
too much excitement :)
Great!!! I'm happy you're excited!! this is the first one of many!
I'm actually writing one right now with an insane amount of high quality free stuff for ableton live and any other DAW people use, now that you want to learn ableton, this one might be really helpful (am I the free stuff guy yet, or what? haha) :D
realy love this posy, greetings from Belguim
Hey @jackjohanneshemp! thank you!
greetings from Colombia!!!
your welkome
On the live chat, I love how you said that it was because of Steem you ended up making more money with your music! 🤑That's a huge testimony to this platform!
:D
Indeed it is, and It's all true!, I'm about to upgrade my really old laptop thank's to this incredible platform! :)
6 months back there wan't a chance of me doing that!
@luisferchav, hmmm... I see a post about upgrading your really old laptop because of Steem in the future! LOL
Hahaha indeed, you read my mind, I just need to get all the parts together and I will make a post about it and show the process of building the new computer :)
Can't wait to see it! 😁
Really love your routine. Greetings from Lagos, Nigeria.
@stevenmosoes
Thank you! greetings from Colombia! :)
Great great well broken down introductory studio post. I've been running a studio in athens, ga for about ten years (in my present buildout at least) and every lick of this is critical learning. I'd also throw in a quick nod to the DIYRE community (which feels steemit-y to me) ... as anybody with even rudimentary soldering skills can get huge returns on small investments in gear .... retrofitting cheap chinese mics and building API 500 series mic pre clones come to mind as incredibly cost effective ways to get gear that hangs with or exceeds whats available at your local guitar center if you have the chops and patience. Was a revelation for me, and the path it led me down has landed me with cloned 1176s, LA2As and Pultecs that I will absolutely shoot out with the real thing any day.
Looking forward to posting some of my own studio content, but judging how long it took for me to finish my first video (a modular synth and drum video even)... I'd better get a more practical workflow asap. Hoping you feel like your first steps at studio related material is going over well. Would be great to get like minded studio folk together on here!! I'm already consuming a preposterous amount of it on youtube, may as well compensate people on my new most favorite ever platform.
Hey @drumoperator!! Thanks for kind words!!
I don't know the DIYRE community (is it a specific site?), but it sounds really interesting, I'm gonna be investigating that now hahaha.
I completely agree though, being able to solder a little bit can go a long way to save money and getting way better gear, plus not being afraid of getting your hands dirty and fixing or modding things is liberating. The compressors you mention are legendary, as I'm sure you know, and being able to not only build them, but also fixing them is so great!! I'm a DIYer myself, and will be making a couple of posts on cable making, and possibly stomp pedal making as well, knowing how to build a high quality cable is a really useful skill to have and knowing how to build a stomp box effect pedal it's just fun!
I get the workflow thing as well! It's really easy to get lost and/or take forever to finish a well produced video explaining audio stuff.
I feel the studio and audio stuff it's taken a little time to get some traction, how ever I've seen that there is a lot of people interested in the subject, but feels overwhelmed by the amount of information there is online, that's why I decided to try and simplify the journey into audio and studio learning, I feel that you get much more further with anything you do when you make it in a way that's meant to help someone, in this case I intend to help all musicians who don't know that much about actual audio, starting with the most basic things hehe.
Also I agree, getting like-minded studio folk together on here would be awesome! Maybe on a discord channel? I will look into it! :)
I like the perspective. Which software you choose is not as important as your experience using it. That's some great advice. Thanks for sharing. :)
Hey @dreamingirwin!
Yeah, it's a really good way of thinking about it, that way you don't end up with option paralysis! That way you can focus on the music! :)
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Buenisimo Luchito!
Gracias Mati! :)
I've seen you in chat on PALnet and now I'm following you. :-)
Cool! Following you as well! :)
Looking forward to your posts, I feel like winter's the slow time of the year for many of us :)
which of the daws is the fastest and most reliable? studio one is a nice programm I used myself a lot but never used reaper. Nice post btw
Thanks @seveaux!!
They are mostly the same in regards to speed, I use studio one pro mostly because of it's mastering suite, it's badass. Reaper takes a little while to master, but it is sooo cheap and so adaptable that I believe everyone should give it a try.
For songwriting and producing I mostly use Ableton, which is the first DAW I learned hehe.
From what I've seen personally, reaper, studio one, Ableton and logic are really really reliable.
Logic is pretty great for this as well, but you gotta have a Mac to use it.
Obviously protools is the most used professionally , but I've never had a professional recording session (on any level studio that has it) that didn't have a protools session crash at least 3 to 4 times in a day. I learned it so I could work on a studio a while back, and didn't enjoy the work flow at all.
I will be making a more in-depth post about daws in the coming weeks :)
Obviously these are just my opinions