It takes a bit of skill and the right knowledge to record audio that sounds good. And the knowledge I refer to is really quite basic, though I was having a hard time coming up with a good metaphor to explain it without having to use overly-technical terminology. So I asked my wife to help me out, and she likened audio to coffee. The more we drew comparisons, the better the analogy between audio and coffee seemed to work. So I’m trying this theory out on my unsuspecting readers. I hope that you will let me know (via the comment form below) if this fails spectacularly. So without further ado, I give you the coffee-recording analogy.
Just like it isn’t that easy to make a really good quality audio recording, it isn’t that easy to make a great cup of coffee. Anyone can make a bad cup of coffee…even a so-so one. In fact a quite large number of people do it every single day. The same is true for audio recording (a quick visit to YouTube will confirm this). But both tasks seem so simple. Pour hot water over a bunch of crushed up beans and drink what comes out of the filter; or make some noise into a microphone hooked up to a recorder. Now just to make this unusual comparison complete, I make this additional observation: Just as you can still make a bad cup of coffee even with an expensive brand of beans, you can make a crappy recording with a pricey microphone.
Is the reverse case also true? Can someone make a good cup of coffee from lousy beans? Or can someone make decent sounding audio with a plastic microphone and a computer? The answer to that is only up to a certain point. The folks who have the savvy and experience will make the coffee/audio as good as it can possibly be with the materials provided; probably surprising the average Joe (no pun intended) with the level of quality that CAN be obtained with such low-end ingredients. These same people could make FAR better quality products with higher quality (usually more expensive) materials, to be sure. What is most important about this last bit is that even that average Joe can learn the all-important fundamental skills of quality coffee/audio production on the cheap materials with cheap ingredients. Once they have the proper skills and awareness of key principles, they can make not-so-bad coffee/recordings out of the bad materials. That is the time for these people to upgrade to better equipment and ingredients. Before they know it, they’ll be making gourmet/professional coffee/recordings from just average gear.
Now you may think this metaphor has run its course, but actually I haven’t even gotten to the comparison that started the whole thing. All that stuff above was just bonus analogy;). Let’s talk about what I think (some other experts may disagree) is the single most important piece of knowledge you can use to make the best sounding audio recording with the equipment you have. The reason I asked my wife to help me out here is that I really didn’t want to have to use the somewhat scary term gain-staging. Like a lot of tech-y stuff, the term is not descriptive to the uninitiated. So this whole coffee thing is an attempt to explain why gain-staging is the most crucial element to good audio.
Okay, here we go. Let’s say you use a drip-coffee maker. How could you make a bad cup of coffee? Given that there is an ideal mix of beans-to-water you could screw it up in two major ways (and any number of minor ways that we’ll ignore for the now). You could make the coffee too strong with too high a bean-to-water ratio. Likewise, you could make it too weak with too low a ratio. Either way, once you’ve screwed it up it really can’t be fixed once the coffee is in the pot. You can’t just add water to too-strong coffee to get the concentration right. Some people try to cover up the bad taste by adding more cream and/or sugar, but it’ll never really be “good.”
And I don’t even KNOW what to try to do with really weak coffee once it’s made. It can’t be good. If someone were really determined, I imagine they could try to drink from a cup that is double or triple the normal size in an attempt to get the same amount of caffeine as usual. But they’d have to drink double or triple the amount of vaguely coffee-flavored water to do it. Or I suppose really desperate folks might try to boil off the excess water to get stronger coffee. Seems like a lot of effort to go to when the result will be iffy, at best.
If, when making the coffee, the amount water is always the same (let’s say you always fill it to the bottom of the metal ring at the top), then the only way to mess up is with too much or too little dry coffee in the filter.
Now it’s time to make the mental switch over to audio recording. Let’s say the volume of your voice (our audio example for today) is like the amount of coffee. If the “amount” of your voice in the recorder (usually a computer sound card these days) is too high, it will end up sounding distorted once it gets through the sound card and onto disk (like coffee in the pot after passing through the filter). You can NOT just turn the volume down to get rid of the distortion AFTER it’s been recorded, the damage has been done. Sure, you can try to add lots of cream and sugar…oh wait, I mean reverb and echo and other audio to cover up the distortion, but you cannot fix it.
Now what if your voice is too low in volume when it hits the sound card? Well, the card is going to pass the same amount of stuff through to the disk, just as the coffee filter is going to pass the same amount of water through the filter, regardless of how much or how little coffee is in the basket. So if the sound card doesn’t have enough voice to work with, it will just record lots of noise along with the little bit of voice it hears. The only way to make the voice audible after it’s recorded would be to turn the volume up. But when you do that, you’re also cranking up all that noise (hissing, crackling, etc.) as well. So you end up with noisy audio, just like weak and watery coffee. At this point you can try to fix the recording by using noise reduction tools. But this is akin to trying to reduce weak coffee by boiling off the water. Even the best noise reduction tools can only do so much. If there is a lot of noise mixed in with the voice, noise reduction will reduce the noise, but at the expense of the audio quality. You’re usually left with a swirly, under-water-y sounding voice after such an exercise.
So the solution (no pun intended) to both coffee and the audio recording quality is to make sure the amount of coffee and voice loudness is not too high, but also not too low, in the process. For the coffee, use a measure and be very precise about it. For audio, use the meters found either in the mixing software (Windows mixer, for example), or even better, use your ears and eyes. The advantage we have with computer audio recording is that we can both hear and see what the level is before committing to it. The loudest part should never “go into the red,” while at the same time, there should be enough voice volume that the quietest part can still be heard. Get it (and by “it” I mean the thing you’re recording…voice or music, etc.) as loud as you can without any part of it distorting and you’ll have cracked the code for getting the best sounding audio possible on whatever gear you are working with. To get some guidance and tutorials on how to do some of this stuff, click here: home recording tips.
Now go make some coffee. For some reason I want some now.
Ken
Home Recording Equipment
One-Man Rock Band Project Completed
Just for fun I decided to record myself as an entire rock band as a demonstration to show what was possible with a modest PC recording studio. The song was a cover of You’re All I Have, by Snow Patrol. If you want to review my first two posts about this project, you can find them at the following links:
Part 1: Rock Song In The box-The PC Recording Studio
Part 2: 1-Man Rock Band – Song In The Box, pt 2
Listen to the finished product!
[jwplayer config=”Custom Audio Player-250″ mediaid=”2660″]
Summary
With just a pretty average computer (Intel Core Duo/3 GHz/3 GB RAM), some VERY inexpensive software (Reaper – see details about cost and capability in my post here: PC Recording Software), an audio interface box, the Line 6 POD Studio GX USB Computer Recording Interface, costing $99, a USB microphone, the Samson Q1U Handheld USB Microphone for $69, and drum software called Jamstix for about $100. I did already have an electric guitar and a bass guitar. For the cost information I’m only going to talk about the recording gear requirements, since there are so many variables in what musical equipment folks might already have.
So just looking at the interface and microphone the cost is about $170. If you use Reaper, you can do this project with their 30-day free trial that never expires and is not crippled in any way. If you like it, you can buy it for $40 bucks! Jamstix also has a free trial, but then costs $100 to download if you want to keep it.
Now if you were to go into a studio and do this by yourself, it would take many hours, which would cost many hundreds (if not thousands) of dollars. And then you’d have to pay that again for every song you wanted to record. Once you have the $300 or so invested in the computer recording studio I’m describing, you’ll only pay once for the gear, so not counting time, every other song you record is free!
How did I do it?
I opened Reaper, turned on the metronome to find the right tempo and inserted Jamstix onto a track. Jamstix will play to the tempo of the song. I set up the song structure of You’re All I Have by Snow Patrol and pushed the record button in Reaper. Voila…stereo drum track. Next I plugged my bass into the Line 6 interface box and played the bass part along with the drums. I did the same thing with the electric guitar, creating several tracks of those. Then I sang the lead and harmony vocals.
After everything was recorded, I applied effects like EQ, compression and reverb for each track as needed (these effects come free with Reaper:). Then I mixed it to taste and rendered it to a stereo track. Done.
Now this may only be something that was freakin’ cool to me and nobody else. If so, oh well. If you would like to learn to do stuff like this though, leave a comment here so I have a feel for how cool folks think this is. There are already video tutorials on the site here to teach the basics of setting up a home recording studio. But if there is enough interest, I can do a few videos showing the one-man rock band thing in more detail.
Either way, it was a blast. I don’t know what I would have done with myself if this technology existed when I was in college. I probably would have flunked out;).
Anyway, if you don’t know anything about recording yet, you can get our first several lessons free…well…for the price of entering your e-mail into the red form at the top right of this page;).
Cheers!
Ken
How Would I Make A Home Recording Studio?
Below is the latest in interesting posts from Yahoo Answers. As usual I am perplexed by the answers given to folks who are obviously just starting out. This person’s advice was to have the guy go spend well over $1000 to get started. What?! CRAZINESS! At the end of this post is my answer, which is starting to get pretty familiar by now to the readers of this blog.
Q: If I want a to make a home recording studio, what will I need as a equipment?
Also, what does this equipment do (the more technical things)?
What stuff can I buy that is good but that is not too expensive?
(this question does not include instruments, just equipment) so don’t worry about that.
A: There are a couple different ways to approach this.
1) You buy an “all-in-one” system like the Roland VS stations. They cost about $2,500 on up for anything decent. The advantage is that they have everything you need to go from a mic to making a CD. The drawback is that they are not as flexible and difficult to upgrade (as in they are the only ones who offer upgrades and you may not like what they offer).
2) You buy a computer system. This offers you the most flexibility, but can be more confusing. For a computer system you need a) A computer that can handle audio recording (Pentium IV or higher with 1G of ram or higher and lots of hard drive space, preferably two hard drives) b) An audio interface in which many come with the software to record. Some suggestions are Digidesign’s Mbox2 (ProTools) or Presonus Fire series. You can really go cheap with some interfaces, but it is up to you. c) You need a mic to get sound in and speakers to get sound out.
With a computer system you can spend anywhere from $1000 on up. It depends on how many inputs you need and what software you want to run. If you want separate software the is meant to be really easy to use, I suggest Mackie’s Tracktion software. They also sell audio interfaces.
Those are the basics, you may want to consider these other items:
– Pop filter
– Studio monitors
– External hard drive (firewire preferred)
– Auralex foam for a vocal booth (or just record in your tub!)
Here is the Home Brew Audio answer:
First of all, DON’T spend more than $100 to start out! Wacky huh? If you are just learning you can do all you need to (by which I mean learn multi-track recording, basic audio editing, and final production) with an average computer, any mic (even the cheap plastic computer mics will do). If you don’t have a mic, you can get a pc mic for about $5.00. The recording software is free (Audacity). That’s all you need for the learning part. You can even do quite a lot with this equipment with a little skill and guidance, though I would stop short of saying you could produce pro quality audio at this price point. So what price-point must you attain to actually produce pro quality audio? Meh, I’d say about $49. Oh yes, you heard right. Just moving from a $5.00 mic to, say, this USB mic: The Samson Q1U will allow you (again with the right skills) to turn out audio quality that I would call “minimum professional level.”
If you want to learn some of these skills I mention quickly, come give our video tutorials a try.
Cheers!
Ken
How to Use the Home Recording Studio You Didn't Know You Already Had
Interested? Read on!
Have you ever wished you could record your a podcast, or a song, or create audio for the videos you took at a wedding or graduation? Maybe you want to start a voice-over business or even your own record company. Then you come back to reality and resign yourself to paying a “professional” to do all this stuff. Why is that?
I’m guessing you have been reading (and believing;)) some of the “how to set up your home studio” articles that talk about the “minimum” amount of gear and/or software you will need to buy BEFORE you even get started learning how to use it all.
Would it change your mind if you discovered that you didn’t need to buy ANY gear? Or that if you did, it was going to be about $5.00? What if in addition to that great news, you also discover that it can be fun and easy to learn home recording? Well guess what? It’s all true.
If you have a PC (or Mac) with a sound card, an mp3 player (for the headphones), and just about any kind of microphone, and an internet connection, you already have the gear you need for a home digital audio recording studio. The only other thing you need is software, which you can go get right now…literally. The software, called Audacity, is extraordinarily powerful, and best of all…it is free! I don’t mean free-for-30-days. And I don’t mean shareware. I’m talking “open-source” free…as in you pay no money for this software, ever.
Just go to the Audacity website at “audacity.sourceforge.net,” download and install Audacity, and you’ll have a home recording studio capable of multi-track recording (for adding music behind your voice, singing harmony with yourself, being a 1-person-band, etc.) and audio editing. All you need now is a bit of guidance to show you what to do. Luckily, there is a lot of free guidance available as well.
There are several tutorials on the interwebs these days to help you with Audacity, starting with the ones on the Audacity website. If you’re like me, you want short, to-the-point, fun, video tutorials that will teach you just what you need to know, when you want to know it. If so, come take a look around at Home Brew Audio, and start using that home digital recording studio you didn’t even know you had!
Now get busy!
PC Recording Software-What is The Best?
What is the best PC recording software around? Well before I say anything more, I should point out that I am in no way affiliated with any of the products I will mention in this article. I have simply been using them for several years now. One of my mandates (yeah I give myself mandates;)) is to help folks record professional sounding audio from a PC recording studio using knowledge as leverage, as opposed to money. And the knowledge I refer to starts out distilled down to several easy-to-learn key audio principles that anyone can put to work making their music, podcasts, sales videos, etc. sound AWESOME. Oh, and I also believe that anyone can start out with a budget of “0-to-5 dollars.”
That last part isn’t because I think you can rival top-notch gear with a 5-dollar studio. It’s because it’s important for you to learn how to squeeze the best possible quality from the cheapest possible gear. Once you understand how to do that, you can make wiser choices when adding gear to your home recording studio. Ultimately, this means you will be able to avoid the all-too-common pitfall of home recordists, which is buying way too much gear for way too much money, and then proceed to continue making crappy audio because they didn’t understand some basic audio principles. How does that sound? Get better quality and spend less, MUCH less on the best recording software for pc? Yeah, I thought that might interest you.
When I say “best” in this article, I’m referring to the whole package, including price and capability. Plus this is all my humble (not really;)) opinion anyway. So let’s get to it.
1. Don’t Fear the Reaper
Remember, I have no affiliation here. But it is my strong opinion that you should run, not walk (or the cyber-equivalent) to the Reaper site on the web and download their free trial software now. The trial version is no different from the “full” version, not crippled in any way. The stated evaluation period is 30 days, but guess what? The program does not stop working after 30 days. You will simply be reminded every time you open it that it is not free forever. This allows you to be more flexible when testing it out, taking more time than usual if need be. It’s on the honor system. Yeah, I know. Who does that? But that isn’t the end. Once you are ready to purchase a license, you have two choices (and remember, the software is the same regardless of what license you have), the discounted license for $40, or the full commercial license for $150. Again it is up to your honor to decide which license to buy. The guideline for the discounted license says (from their site) you can use it if:
- You are an individual, using REAPER only for personal use.
- You are an individual or business, using REAPER for commercial use, and the yearly gross revenue does not exceed USD $20,000.
- You are an educational or non-profit organization.
If you do find yourself making $20,000 from the recordings made with Reaper, then you will not mind springing for the $150 full commercial license, I presume.
2. How Well Does It Work?
Really well. Oh, you want details. Alright, here goes. I use it every day to record voiceovers, podcasts, music, and any number of other audio products. Reaper does everything I need it to and a LOT of stuff I don’t need often. IN fact, the capability is so vast that there are things it can do that I don’t even know about. And I use it every day, and have for 5 years. Using Reaper, I’ve produced pop music CDs (Raven Boy Music), countless voiceovers, audio books, royalty-free music, podcasts, videos, etc. For a complete description of what it can do, go to their site. But if you want to record and mix multi-track, hi-resolution audio fast, including MIDI capability and built-in effects (lots of them), Reaper is what you need.
3. What’s the Catch?
Reaper is tracking and mixing software. That means if you want to do destructive editing of audio files, you will probably want to also use an audio editing program such as Audacity (free), Sound Forge, Adobe Audition, etc. I have Adobe Audition, but since I have been using Reaper, I’ve used Audition less and less because Reaper offers a lot of editing capability as well, and it’s non-destructive. The only thing I find myself using my editor for these days is noise reduction, and other treatment (some call it mastering ) of the mixed-down stereo (usually) end-product. One other thing I am led to understand is an issue with Reaper is its MIDI capability. But they are constantly upgrading that. And to tell you the truth, I love using Reaper for MIDI. I use it for virtual instruments all the time. I think it works great. But if you are like, a MIDI ninja, you may find this program a bit lacking, or so I am told. I am not a MIDI ninja.
So there you have it. You can start using what I consider to be the best PC recording software around for free, right now. After you’ve come to the conclusion that it’s awesome, just pay $40 for a license. Then after you make $20,000 with it, spring for the $150 clams it will cost for the full commercial license. You will thank me.
For more information in the form of cool video tutorials on how to get started recording from you regular computer (as opposed to some super-computer the music store guy says you have to have), check us out here: PC Recording Tutorial Videos