Probably one of the most affordable in the market, the Edifier R1800BT Stereo Bluetooth Speakers is not only affordable, it is also one of the best in its price range. It has 4 bass drivers and the front-facing reflex ports on both speakers.
Since 1996 and has since dominated the consumer audio market in China and is not slowly making a name in Europe and North America. Edifier R1800BT box includes the required audio cables, removable speaker grilles, a remote control unit with a corresponding CR2025 battery.
Read more about this here: https://bedroomproducersblog.com/2017/11/18/edifier-r1800bt-review/
Music Recording
Long Song Fade Out
Although we don’t hear them in music as often as before, long song fade outs can still be appropriate. They’re super easy to do in any DAW. In Reaper, try doing it using automation on the Master Track Volume.
Find out how to do that in the article here: https://reaperblog.net/2017/11/long-fade-out/
Get Your Songs In Music Libraries
For those starting songwriters and music producers out there one major goal is for their craft to be heard. And without connections getting it out there can be quite difficult. If your one of those indie writers hoping to get it out there music libraries just might be the answer you need. You just might get that music licensing that you desire. Spotify in itself pays about $3,000 in royalties for a million streams. Do you get the picture?
So here are some tips how you can get your songs into music libraries. Stay one step ahead by getting your music ready for licensing
Read more here: http://blog.discmakers.com/2017/10/get-your-songs-in-music-libraries/
Reaper's Virtual Amp Modeler For Electric Guitar
Did you know that Reaper had electric guitar “virtual amp” modelers? I didn’t :-P. There are several and they are included with Reaper – in the collection of plugins it comes with. The effect is a “JS” plugin (short for “jesusonic“), which is a Reaper-specific plugin.
Anyway, someone on our YouTube Channel was asking if there was a way to plug his electric guitar into Reaper through a regular audio interface (such as a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2), and hear it sound like it was played through “virtual amps.”
Amp Modelers In Reaper?
At first I didn’t know if you could do this with a standard interface. I use a specific interface – the Line 6 Pod Studio – for recording electric guitar. You use that interface (the Pod) along with the Line 6 software, Amp Farm, to access dozens and dozens of high quality virtual amplifiers. This is how I recorded “That Thing You Do.” See our post “Cover of “That Thing You Do” – Record a Rock Song on Your Computer” for more on that :-).
For the kind of quality of amp models you get with Line 6, you obviously pay (gladly, in my case). But it turns out that Reaper has some amp models (in the effect, “Convolution Amp/Cab Modeler”) that are FREE! I was shocked. And as I said earlier, it’s already part of Reaper out of the box (virtually speaking :)).
How Good Are These Virtual Amps?
Are they as good as the Line 6 ones? No they are not. But they are pretty cool! For one thing, they are free (I did mention that, right? :-P). But technically the Reaper amp modeler does not try to model the actual physical amplifier. The reason for the name “convolution amp/cab modeler” is that it is really an “impulse” of the the amp in a space, rather than trying to make everything sound like it was run through the amplifier.
What does that mean? Well, probably the best way to learn what that means is to check out the article here from Sound on Sound. The point is that the Reaper “virtual amp” effect is more of an approximation than an attempt to sound exactly like a real amp.
That doesn’t mean it isn’t cool! See the video below for how to do it and what it sounds like:
As I show in the video, you can add distortion to the sound by loading another JS plugin (called “distortion,” oddly enough).
Also, you can “play live” by loading the effects on the track and arming it to record. You will have to switch on the “record monitoring” button. All that is shown in the video.
So you do not necessarily need to have a paid virtual amp program or a specific guitar interface in order to record a cool electric guitar sound using Reaper. Have fun!
Microphone Guide For Beginners
The microphone, this instrument pretty much sums up the beginning of the process of recording. Whether be it audio, instruments or a full orchestra put together all of these go through the microphone, without which everything is pretty much a dead end. Microphones are basically the other end your speaker if you want good to come out of it, it starts with having a good input device. Using similar components of a speaker like the diaphragms that causes vibrations on both ends thus you can describe music production as manipulating contents between to vibrating diaphragms. This makes the microphone pretty much important.
Read more here: http://www.musictech.net/2017/10/beginners-guide-microphones/