T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1926.1 | | AQUA::ROST | I won't play piano for the Dead | Thu Aug 02 1990 16:09 | 8 |
| Hi Howard!
You should add DNEAST::COMMUSIC to your notebook (KP7 will do it).
That conference discusses electronic music, synths, keyboards, home
recording, etc. Check out note 1 and note 2.4 in particular to help
get you started. Good luck....
Brian
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1926.2 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Professional Aumbre | Fri Aug 03 1990 10:28 | 19 |
| Hi Howie, My borther in law and myself have a home studio.
We co-own a two family, and he had a spare room in his house, so
all of it's up there.
We use one of them FOSTEX 8 track deck/boards with a stero compressor,
and a handfull of digital effects processors, and a drum machine,...
And as far as keyboards go, we don't have any persay, rather were
using my midi guitar, with a sound controller. fills the bill quite nicely.
For mix downs and monitoring, wer'e using some one of his stereo system,
one of them Pionere Componet things...
You can probably get something started on your budget if you shop around the
want adds.
We've found that the spot we could use the investment in at this time would
be sound proffing... ultimately, we'll have to build a room in the cellar.
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1926.3 | My 2c worth of advice..... | MILKWY::JACQUES | If you don't stop, you'll go deaf | Fri Aug 03 1990 12:50 | 85 |
| There are a lot of things to be considered when shopping for gear
for a studio. Everything should integrate together into a system.
First thing I would do is decide what level of automation you
want. Many people putting together a studio these days are building
the entire system around a computer. The computer allows them to
do musical notation and convert it directly to midi sequences. From
there, they can go in and tweak all the patches, drum machine
commands, etc. There are now many multi-track recorders on the market
that have built-in midi time code features. Rather than recording the
output from a synthesizer or drum machine onto tape, you simply
record the midi sequence onto tape, and then when it is time to do
the final mixdown, the time code drives all the synthesizers and drum
machines so that you have a first-generation signal going to tape.
There is some very powerful technology available for the home studio
buff these days, but once you make a decision to go this route, things
get complicated and the expensive quick. The price you pay for all
the automation is one of great expense and much time and patience
getting it all to work together, and learning how the gear all works.
You have to develop a full understanding of both the harware and
software.
You also have to consider if your music really lends itself
to synthesizers. You may be better off with a good digital piano,
depending on the type of music you want to create. Some of the
digi pianos on the market contain classical piano, electric piano,
honky-tonk (detuned) piano, clavinet, harpsichord, etc. Some even
include Electric bass and upright bass sounds.
I personally have shyed away from the entire midi-computerized
realm. I have a small studio at home, mostly geared towards recording
gutars, bass, and acoustic instruments. I am planning to add a drum
machine to my setup eventually, but I am definately not planning to
buy a computer or synthesizer. Drum machines may be programmed, and
the program can be dumped to a cassette tape recorder for storage.
It's crude but works. For a small studio application it is plenty
good enough for me.
If I were you, I would concentrate on getting a good quality mixing
console, with as many channels as you can afford. I have only 7
channels on my mixer, and my multitracker has a built-in four channel
mixer, but I would much rather have a 12-24 channel mixer, and a
recording deck with no built-in mixer. It's surprising how fast you
can eat up channels. I would also try to get as many tracks as you
can afford. The disadvantage of being limited to four tracks, is that
you have to bounce tracks together. This is a serious limitiation in
my opinion. If you can afford a good 8 track recorder, go for it.
For a small home studio, a 16x8x4x2 mixer, and an 8 track reel-reel
recorder is really the best way to go IMHO.
By the time you get the mixing console and recorder, you may be out
of money. From that point on, I would be very selective in adding
things like efx, compressors/limiter, patch bays, etc. You can always
add these things a little at a time. It's very easy to get carried
away thinking you NEED all this stuff right away. The fact is, you
can work without it and get great results just the same. You should
take your time researching and selecting each piece of equipment.
Make sure you have a full understanding of your equipment, and develop
a plan of what you want your studio to evolve into before you go out
and spend a ton of money on the extras. I started putting my system
together about 6 years ago. It has taken me this long to get to my
present system, and it is still changing and being upgraded all the
time. Buying modular equipment is what makes this possible.
I want even bother to recommend any specific brands. Half the fun of
putting together a studio is shopping around, researching the market,
then making the decisions and the final purchase. Keep in mind that
saleman do not always know what they are talking about. Read as much
literature as you can find. Ask the same questions of several differant
people. The folks in COMMUSIC can definately be a big help, even if
you decide not to go with midi or synthesizers.
If you need any information on building the actual studio room itself,
I can point you to some very good notes on the subject. When I planned
my basement studio, I got lot's of help in the Music, Guitar, and
Commusic conferences about soundproofing, power requirements, ventil-
ation, etc.
Hope this helps you get started.
Mark
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1926.4 | Depends... | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Fri Aug 03 1990 14:27 | 13 |
|
As said earlier, it depends a lot on what you're going to do.
If you're going to record a band, you'll need mikes, a mixer, some
effects and a good tape deck. If you're going to burn the midnight
oil composing by yourself, you'd want/need other things.
"Home Studio" is such a broad term these days; I can imagine
someone sitting alone in their bedroom typing commands into a 'Mac
on one end, to a six piece band doing live takes in a basement (complete
with an isolated drum booth) on the other.
Joe
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1926.5 | I'm in. | SMURF::BENNETT | Be Bi Bo | Fri Aug 17 1990 13:12 | 58 |
|
I'm getting started and want to bounce some ideas around and see
how they go.
Last weekend I droped a coupla bills on a drum machine (dr550)
and have quickly developed
MIDI Studio Fever
I have a tight budget that grows incrementally. I'll be turning
this stuff over in a rolling upgrade.
Here's what I have:
drum machine
guitars/bass
1 20wt bass combo
1 60wt guitar combo
Ibanez RP100 (mixes tape w/1 signal to stereo out)
Home stereo amp & cassette deck w/speakers
Here's what I think I want:
Stereo power amp & speakers (ahem... Monitors)
Mixing capabilities
Tape Recorder
Guitar Preamp
FX processor
How I think I can get started:
Power amp and speakers:
Find a cheap used stereo, use my extra loudspeakers
Mixing Capabilities + Tape Recorder
Start with Tascam Porta [1,2] HS
Question1: can I bypass tape with these units
and just use it as a mixer?
Guitar Preamp + FX processor
Start with a combo unit
Question2: do most of the multiFX units (ART,
DigiTech) act as preamps?
From there I expect to start rolling upgrades:
speakers to something like stage monitors
amp to QSC, Crown or Equiv
get separate mix capabilities
separate out FX & preamp
add EX, compression, etc.....
So whaddya think about questions 1 & 2?
Waddya think about the overall strategy?
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1926.6 | We should also read commusic | TCC::COOPER | MIDI rack puke | Fri Aug 17 1990 15:40 | 8 |
| Sounds like what I'm trying to do...'Cept I have a ST116 16 channel
mixer and power amp...with my cheesy UA home stereo speakers and
cheesy Ross 4x4.
We should keep in contact, since I'm gonna jump in high gear when I
get to Colorado.
jc (Who wants a basement-personal-studio too)
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1926.7 | | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | Give a little | Fri Aug 17 1990 16:39 | 4 |
| If you're Ross 4x4 is anything like mine, you'll want another
multitrack for any serious recording.
Greg
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1926.8 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI rack puke | Fri Aug 17 1990 17:03 | 6 |
| Thats a given. ;)
Not bad for dorking around, but I'd like a Tascam MIDI studio or something
along those lines...
jc
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1926.9 | punch in on 424? | HAVASU::HEISER | unborn women have rights too | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:05 | 5 |
| Does the Tascam 424 have the punch in/out option?
A lot of the locals are blowing out the Tascam Porta 2 now for < $500.
Mike
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1926.10 | My 0.02 | SMURF::GALLO | From small things... | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:14 | 22 |
|
re: punch in/out
yes.
re: porta 2
Are they porta 2s or porta 2 "HS". The HS is the 3-3/4 ips machines.
Personally, I'd take a 2HS over a 424 if I could get the 2Hs for
$500. The porta 2s have analog VU meters, plus 6 mixer channels,
among other things. It just seems to be better built than the
424.
I had a porta 2 (regular speed) for a while and I really liked it.
It had problems with dropouts, though (bought it used). I'd pass
on a regular speed porta2 at $500, but if I didn't have the 424
now, I'd jump at the chance to get a porta 2HS at that price.
-Tom
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1926.11 | 488 - more $, but worth a look | FOO::BHAVNANI | SYS$UNWIND - laid back VMS | Tue Oct 29 1991 12:44 | 6 |
| I know $1200 is more than 2wice the cost of a new Porta-2, but if
you're thinking long-term, the 8-track 488 is awesome. There's
very little crosstalk between the channels and all in all it's a
great machine.
/ravi
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1926.12 | | HAVASU::HEISER | unborn women have rights too | Tue Oct 29 1991 17:12 | 5 |
| Yeah I did look, but stopped when I saw the price tag ;-)
I've turned over a new leaf: I don't look at things I can't afford ;-)
Mike
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1926.13 | My Decisions.. | WMOIS::RAY | | Fri Apr 03 1992 14:31 | 31 |
| Well its been almost 2 years since I started this note, and this is
what I've ended up with. "Yes I did get bitten by the midi bug.."
Roland U20 - Keyboard
Yamaha SY55 - Keyboard
Korg M1 - Keyboard
Yamaha Whirlwind - keyboard (similar to the Mini-moog)
Roland S-50 - Sampler
Yamaha - TX802 Sound Modual
Roland R5 Drum Machine
Roland - MC50 Sequencer
Tascam 488 8 track recorder
Peavey 8 channel mixing board (to small in the process of up grading)
Audio LOgic Compressor
Audio Logic EQ
Peavey Noise gate
DSP256 Effects unit
Sound Design Power Amp
Audio LOgic Speakers
Other than an occasional up grade I'm pretty much finished with
Midi-gear. This stuff will be around for awhile...
Howard
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