iMac
Logic
Apogee Duet
various mics (MXL large condenser, med condenser, shure SM58, SM59)
Oxygen 25 midi controller
I'll usually rent whatever else I need for a recording project
Rev
—Canadian Surf
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Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 3797 North Atlantic |
iMac I'll usually rent whatever else I need for a recording project Rev —Canadian Surf |
Joined: Mar 08, 2008 Posts: 195 NJ shore |
Acid Music Studio 7 (Tried Cakewalk, but I prefer Acid), Zoom pedal that works as an interface with my computer, Fender JM, Squier Strat and Kent Bass, Behringer mic —"We're lousy, we can't play. If you wait until you can play, you'll be too old to get up there. We stink, really. But it's great," Johnny Ramone . |
Joined: Oct 05, 2009 Posts: 93 |
Currently using the Jamvox for an audio interface/guitar simulator, i use a sansamp pedal for the bass and toontracks's EZdrummer for the drums. I run it all into a cheapo Toshiba laptop and it all running Reaper as my DAW. It's simple but it works great for me. — |
Joined: Apr 07, 2011 Posts: 3 Kyle, Texas, USA |
I use Ableton Live on my Mac. Focusrite Saffire 40 for the soundcard and I've got a couple of different mics. I've also got a Novation X-Station 25 which I use. Dano Baritone, Parker P-44, Fender Tele, and Fender Deluxe Reverb Amp. I like it and it's big fun... |
Joined: Nov 02, 2010 Posts: 97 Austin, TX |
revhank wrote:
How do you like that Apogee Duet? My setup: i7 PC with six cores, Cubase 6, RME UFX interface, UAD-2 Quad, Universal Audio/Focusrite/JoeMeek preamps, Mackie control surface, Shure and Avantone microphones, plus a large selection of plugins. BTW, I have a pair of Avantone CV-12 tube condensers - these are hands-down the best mics priced under $1000 that I have ever used! (street price is about $500 but it easily sounds like a microphone costing 2x or 3x the price)! JZ |
Joined: Apr 05, 2006 Posts: 1544 Bethlehem, GA |
oops...posted this already. Sorry about that. —Jack Booth The Mariners (1964-68, 1996-2005) Last edited: May 18, 2011 15:00:42 |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 3797 North Atlantic |
The Duet is really clean, easy to use, and interfaces well with Logic. Plus it has a small footprint (my wife's favourite thing about it). Rev —Canadian Surf |
Joined: Aug 04, 2011 Posts: 100 England |
I'm still using my Yamaha AW4416 that I bought for thousands about ten years ago. They go for as little as 300 bucks on ebay now and I can highly recommend it as an all-in-one box for recording, with built in everything including flying fader automation. I used mine as a mobile location recording studio for a couple of years and it is still rock solid and reliable, no latency and never once crashed on me. I also still have my 40-year old Revox A77 tape recorder for when I fancy a bit of old analog sexiness. |
Joined: Feb 25, 2008 Posts: 321 Canada's Wet Coast |
I find that recording setups are like amps, guitars, effects. You just keep evolving them to a point where you have to say, "enough is enough". After doing this for more years than I can remember, I still wonder when I'll reach that point... SoundCraft LX7ii-24, Pro VLAII's, Apple 30" Cinema Display, Apogee Ensemble, Behringer ADA8000, Presonus CS, Yamaha HS80M's, AKG702's, MacPro (with SSD's), Behringer A500, JBL monitors, Behringer DEQ2496, Euphonix MC Mix, Lexicon reverb, and on and on...:-D —Mel |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle |
Nice desk! My desk is a Spinet piano, and then my desk becomes the floor, amp, or pile of boxes when I need to record the piano. |
Joined: Feb 25, 2008 Posts: 321 Canada's Wet Coast |
JakeDobner wrote:
LOL...my first "desk" wasn't even that good. It was an IKEA bookcase that I didn't put the back on so I could do all the wiring. The only way to use it was to stand in front of it but the shelves started to sag badly. Obviously that didn't last long so I went through a bevy of "computer" desks that didn't work either. I finally designed and built this one two years ago. Added in interior lighting, wiring trays and I still add and remove gear on a fairly regular basis...Just added a Focusrite VRM. Interesting little device. —Mel |
Joined: Feb 28, 2006 Posts: 813 Boise, ID |
-Windows 7 Ultimate Shawn Martin |
Joined: Jun 26, 2007 Posts: 399 Cleveland, Ohio |
Mel wrote:
Mel, do you have the Saffire Pro 24 DSP? Do you use it for headphone mixing? I was thinking of getting that box instead of upgrading monitors. Are the choices of 'rooms' any good? |
Joined: Feb 25, 2008 Posts: 321 Canada's Wet Coast |
cambeezy wrote:
No, don't own any Focusrite gear other than their VRM box: I use an Apogee Ensemble coupled with a Behringer ADA8000 for the 20 channels of audio that I use. For mixing, I don't mix in the box. I use my mixer with all separate audio tracks coming into it as a "summing" mixer. When I get it all right, I record the output of the mixer for a mix down. Once the mix is down to a stereo track, I send that to the VRM and listen to on the various "rooms" and "speaker" options to get an idea of how the mix translates. I just started to take the procedure a step further now. I use the "sends" on the audio tracks to route them to the VRM as well. So I can quickly listen to the mix through the speakers, through a Presonus Central Station and also with the VRM (it will sum all the audio tracks to stereo). This tends to paint a better picture of how the instruments fit together in a mix when using its less than stellar room speakers selections. The LCD Panel TV speakers, for the most part, are terrible. So you can't mix for them because that would toss everything else off, but you get a good idea of what you got too much of.. The VRM also emulates the old NS10's. Probably the worlds worst speaker system, but if you can make those sound good, it translates to almost anything else quite well. For headphones I use two different sets. I have AKG271's and 702's. I find those colour the sound from the VRM much less than other phones I've tried, like the Audio Technica ATH50, or Sony 7506, or Sennheiser's HD280. The 702's are the most comfortable as well and I find them great for tracking. But headphones will "colour" the sound so you have to be aware of that if you wanted to mix with the VRM. The VRM rooms and speakers are actually quite impressive and a little overwhelming at the same time because of the huge variations between "professional", "bedroom" and "living" rooms. I think if I only had the VRM to mix with, I'd be inclined to use the NS10's for the mix, then select the other rooms and speakers to see how it translates. Ultimately, regardless of if you mix with near fields or something ilke the VRM, it's how well you get to know the sound, and how well you can hear how it translates to other speaker setups. Once you know the strong and weak areas you'll find it a lot easier to get a pretty good mix to start with it. Which leaves mastering, but that's a completely different kettle of sardines... —Mel |
Joined: Aug 04, 2011 Posts: 100 England |
drumuitar wrote:
I've yet to record with my Mustang too. I think I'll have some time tomorrow to tweak some patches to my liking. In truth that's what I bought it for, to fiddle around with and pass a bit of time in the coming winter evenings. Mel, the NS10's are great speakers for mixing and mastering. They let you know what's going on in the important but usually crowded mid frequency part of the spectrum. I've been using them for over 10 years now and I agree that they are not ear friendly as they give you listener fatigue after extended listening times. I'm very interested in that Focusrite VRM, the demo on their website nails the NS10 signature sound alright NS10's have stood the test of time as a handy reference and these days most folks seem to use them with a sub-woofer, which I also do. You can't use a sub with the majority of monitors due to them having a reflex port which mostly causes time-based interference in the bottom octave. In fact that was one of the reasons that NS10's were popular with producers from the beginning due to them being a sealed box design. |
Joined: Feb 25, 2008 Posts: 321 Canada's Wet Coast |
airesound wrote:
I found the NS10's are in a you either love them or hate them category. I know engineers who swear by them others who swear at them. So everyone has their own subjectiveness about them. Personally I find them good for tracking but I prefer something else for mixing. I've tried using subs for mixing but I'm probably too old school so I use ported monitors for my mixes. And I know how they translate for most systems. As for mastering, apparently I don't have the "ears" for it. I can mix quite well, but mastering is a completely different process so I let the people who are good at that do it. I rarely see mixing and mastering done by the same engineers. —Mel |
Joined: Nov 28, 2011 Posts: 795 Prescott Valley, AZ |
PC based Cubase SX 3.0 But I still can't duplicate the sound of the old Tascam 38 1/2" 8 track I sold about 6 years ago. |
Joined: Nov 28, 2011 Posts: 795 Prescott Valley, AZ |
vintagesurfdude wrote:
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Joined: Dec 08, 2007 Posts: 1303 |
vintagesurfdude wrote:
Amen! I'll never part with mine https://www.facebook.com/coffindagger Last edited: Jan 24, 2012 07:48:40 |
Joined: Aug 29, 2009 Posts: 1556 Israel |
Wow! Very nice setup you got there, Psychonaut. |