Help Needed - Multitrack recording on Powerbook |
Tue 16 Oct 2001, 03:05
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 5 Joined: 16-Oct 01 From: Brooktondale Member No.: 2,044 |
Hi,
I just joined this forum and am hoping to pick some brains. I have been doing home recordings for many years, but recently have decided to go digital. Here's what I'm working with: • Wallstreet G3 Powerbook - souped up to 466mhz, 192mg/RAM 20G/HD. • Cubase 5.0 • Digigram VXPocket Audio Card My non-computer hardware includes, several electric guitars, a Roland JW-50 synth, and a Shure Beta 57A mic (arriving soon). Here's where I'm getting a little bit stuck. • I have started to test out the Audio card and am finding that the mic levels are too low. I'm testing it with a very old Shure that has seen better days. My guess is that I need a pre-amp to boost the levels, but am not 100% sure. Anyone have any experience with this? • Does anyone know if Cubase 5.0 has a level meter for recording? If not, how do I visually monitor the input level? • Is there a way to convert midi tracks into audio tracks in Cubebase? I know relatively nothing about midi and to date have recorded my keyboard parts as regular audio tracks. My guess is that they would be cleaner (sonically) as Midi tracks if they could be converted to audio. True? Any help would be greatly appreciated. I think I'm close to having the home studio of my dreams, which will be a big step up from my old Fostex (original) X-15 multitracker. Although I have not recorded live on my mac, I have done a significant amount of transferring and digitally remixing my old 4 track recordings with success. Best and thanks, John |
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Mon 22 Oct 2001, 10:12
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#2
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 3 Joined: 22-Oct 01 From: Auckland Member No.: 2,112 |
the low level on the mic might be a impedence mismatch, u need a device with a mic input and line level output [mixer] [old tape recorder]
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Mon 22 Oct 2001, 17:05
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 74 Joined: 01-Mar 01 From: Orleans - CA Member No.: 322 |
For what it is worth, I record all my keyboards to midi first and then record to audio once I am satisfied with the parts. Since I am using an iMac I need, of course, a USB/MIDI interface to do this. For software synthesizers, I simply bridge the input/output jacks on the computer to record them. I am not a CUBASE user but I do remember reading somewhere that with CUBASE there is some sort of menu option that allows you to import audio from a software synthesizer running on the same computer using an existing midi track.
-------------------- Abbie
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