Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Basic pc recording essays
Basic pc recording essays First thing's first - what is your purpose of recording on a PC? Are you doing it for fun? Are you an up-and-coming producer? Or are you trying to upgrade your current recording setup? I will be covering the aspect of simple, basic recording on a PC. Read on. Let's take a look at how sounds get recorded into your computer and get spit out of your speakers. Whether you have a set of turntables, a microphone, drum machine, sampler, etc., you will need to somehow plug your gear into your computer's sound card. Let's say you have a SoundBlaster Live soundcard installed on your PC. When you take a look at the soundcard, you can see that it has an input and output. But they're not RCA plugs, what are they? 1/8 inch. So what you'll need to do is get some wires that have 1/8 inch at one end and RCA at the other end. You need the sound to travel like this: RCA OUT of your drum machine, sampler, etc., If you have multiple pieces of gear and you would like to hook them all up together, you'll need to either connect all of them to a mixer and then go to your soundcard, or connect them via MIDI, but I won't get into all of that this time. The sound is now able to pass through the soundcard and recorded into your computer. It then sends the sound out of the soundcard, through the OUT slot. That's where you hook up another wire going from the soundcard's OUT to the IN of your amp. There are too many to name, but even the most basic soundcard will do nowadays, but it all depends on what you want to accomplish and how good you want the sound to be. As long as the soundcard is full-duplex and has the basics like IN, OUT, MIDI IN, MIDI Out, SPDIF Out (to connect to a DAT machine for example), then you'll be fine. Once the sound reaches your computer, you must have some kind of software program that can record it. Windows has a b ...
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