Mini Disc To G5; Di To G5 |
Fri 25 Feb 2005, 09:04
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#11
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 10 Joined: 16-May 03 From: Los Angeles - US Member No.: 18,038 |
That's Optical/Line in... a jack with two functions.
A mixing desk doesn't generally get audio into a computer readable format... for that you need some kind of computer interface (which connects USB, FireWire, or PCI Card, usually). The Mac has the line input, but the sound quality is generally much less than what you would get with even cheap external equipment. The Mbox (and many other devices) provides high quality mic and instrument preamps and A/D conversion, along with some monitoring and insert functionality; it also provides digital input. ProTools LE is not at all a crippled version... it has a limited track count (32 + MIDI), but otherwise provides all the functionality of a TDM system, and has the benefit of being completely compatible, so you can easily bring a drive over to someone who has a TDM rig to take advantage of their expensive plug-ins and such... The main difference between TDM and LE is that TDM allows you to take advantage of very expensive DSP hardware wherer LE does everything natively. Suffice it to say, ProTools LE is used in all facets of professional production, and has even pulled many people (especially mobile people) away from TDM. The MBox has really nice mic preamps compared to similar devices (and even compared to the Digi002 systems), and ProTools on a well-maintained system is extremely stable and reliable. The Mbox handles only two simultaneous inputs and outputs. If you want to record more tracks at once, or play back more, there are currently many firewire devices which will handle that, from PreSonus, Tascam, M-Audio, as well as the Digi002 and 002R ProTools systems. I can't vouch for their software stability. Or, you can get a mixer and an Mbox-type device and rercord stereo mixdowns. Or get one of the new computer-connected mixers (Mackie Onyx with firewire I/O for quality and $$, or Alesis USB Mixers for low price, etc.). Right now, there's a bewildering array of options. My personal experience has been that ProTools LE systems (MBox and Digi002) have the most stable software (I've done many OS/computer/ProTools version changes without problem), have the most commonly used (at the professional level) software and the high-level of support that it entails, and very nice, reliable (except for the pesky 002 power harness) hardware that's all well worth the price premium.... |
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Fri 25 Feb 2005, 15:11
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#12
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 3 Joined: 17-Apr 04 From: Seltjarnarnes - IS Member No.: 41,226 |
Hi.- mpnow
I use Logic Silver for recording and mixin radio ads. To record a voice you must have a mixer; I do have YAMAHA Mixingconsole G10/2 and a microphone NUEMANN. This mixer is not expensive but very small and nice to work with. You can also plug in guitars and keyboard if you wish to !! It´s easy to see on the G4 tower where to put IN the mixer and where to take OUT for perfect listining in your stereo-amplifire. A straigt microphone in to the IN input does not give you a good sound. You can mabe use e-box to boost up the microphone. |
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Sat 26 Feb 2005, 14:27
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#13
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 2 Joined: 24-Feb 05 From: London - UK Member No.: 61,258 |
you only need the preamp part of the mixer (the part that boosts the mic signal)- the mixers actual function of mixing signals is irrelavent if all you're doing is recording a single microphone
these days you can get perfectly good pre-amps on soundcards- the two that come with the mbox are designed by focusrite and are much higher quality than any of the yamaha mg desks preamps. You are therefore getting everything you need to record high quality audio into the computer without having to buy superfluous items like a mixing desk you wont use (everything except the mic that is) only get a mixer if you are mixing more than one audio signal |
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Sat 26 Feb 2005, 15:19
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#14
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 3 Joined: 17-Apr 04 From: Seltjarnarnes - IS Member No.: 41,226 |
QUOTE (Dave Computer @ Feb 26 2005, 13:27) you only need the preamp part of the mixer (the part that boosts the mic signal)- the mixers actual function of mixing signals is irrelavent if all you're doing is recording a single microphone these days you can get perfectly good pre-amps on soundcards- the two that come with the mbox are designed by focusrite and are much higher quality than any of the yamaha mg desks preamps. You are therefore getting everything you need to record high quality audio into the computer without having to buy superfluous items like a mixing desk you wont use (everything except the mic that is) only get a mixer if you are mixing more than one audio signal Hi ..Dave is right: IF you are just recording á voice... but I didi go the mixer way.- because I would like to take in more that just one mic. And more: I have just bought this "T-RackS 24 Maserting Suite" .- that gives a state of art mastering to you final recording. When I have mixed final mix: on my radio-ads play thme in the T-Rack and have a body-como-pressed sound for FM-radio or TV-broadcasting.. just pick the sound youlike. Fantastic toy... !!! See all about it on : www.ikmultimedia.com by bd[B] |
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Mon 12 Nov 2007, 01:12
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#15
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 11 Joined: 23-Dec 05 From: Minneapolis - US Member No.: 74,293 |
Two related questions; 1) I have sketches of rough songs I recorded with the aid of a tiny little stereo microphone on a sony minidisc player. I would like to put them onto the hard drive of my G5. How do I do this? 2) I have been trying to start recording these sketches straight onto the mac (into Garageband) using exactly the same little microphone that I used to record onto the sony mini disc, but without any success. I do not understand why not. I have checked that (a) the mike still works by using it on the mini disk player again five minutes ago; (b) in my 'system preferences' I have made sure that the 'input' is on 'audio line-in', that the volume control is up as high as it will go (though it seems to refuse to stay there and become the default volume setting); © that the tiny little jack of the mike is plugged into the audio input jack on the back of the G5; and (d) in Garageband, the new track is a 'real instrument' (voice). Do not see what else I can do (I have not yet tried plugging the mike into the headphones socket on the front as I do not want to damage anything). Anyone any suggestions that will do the trick with the tools I have before me? Two related questions;
1) I have sketches of rough songs I recorded with the aid of a tiny little stereo microphone on a sony minidisc player. I would like to put them onto the hard drive of my G5. How do I do this? 2) I have been trying to start recording these sketches straight onto the mac (into Garageband) using exactly the same little microphone that I used to record onto the sony mini disc, but without any success. I do not understand why not. I have checked that (a) the mike still works by using it on the mini disk player again five minutes ago; (b) in my 'system preferences' I have made sure that the 'input' is on 'audio line-in', that the volume control is up as high as it will go (though it seems to refuse to stay there and become the default volume setting); © that the tiny little jack of the mike is plugged into the audio input jack on the back of the G5; and (d) in Garageband, the new track is a 'real instrument' (voice). Do not see what else I can do (I have not yet tried plugging the mike into the headphones socket on the front as I do not want to damage anything). Anyone any suggestions that will do the trick with the tools I have before me? |
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Mon 12 Nov 2007, 06:06
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#16
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 479 Joined: 08-May 05 From: Portland - US Member No.: 65,373 |
Your mini disc player probably has a built in preamp and therefore automatically boosts an incoming signal to an acceptable level. Have you tried the outputs of the mini disc player into the input of the mac (I don't know anything about the mini disc outputs but you may just have to find the proper adapter cables)? I don't know if that will work or not (I've never tried). However if that doesn't work you will need some kind of interface that will accept the output of your mini disc player (I am assuming RCA jacks) and possibly one that will have a microphone preamp. As cheap as some mixers are, you may want to just go the route of buying a small mixer that has a microphone preamp and then using its output to go into the mac's. There are some microphones with a built in preamp but, most have a very low output and therefore need to be amplified prior to going into your computer. Another possibility is buying a USB microphone....those are fairly inexpensive (around 100 dollars, US).
Good Luck! www.myspace.com/mortal_engines |
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