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Darangen

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Posts posted by Darangen

  1. What kind of music would you be making?

    If you're not doing any live recording, you can probably get away with a soundblaster card.  If you are doing live recording you really don't want to skimp on your audio device, there are decently affordable 1-2 channel audio devices for usb or firewire out there for under $250, I'd recommend something like http://www.zzounds.com/item--PRSAUDIOBOX

    Ultimately if you're building a new pc for audio, you want to make sure you've got a good motherboard, a good processor and a decent chunk of ram if you're using EWQL stuff. Furthermore, sites like https://pcpartpicker.com can help you make sure your components are compatible.

    If you don't need an audio interface for live recording, you could go with something like this: https://pcpartpicker.com/list/RtjZ9W

     

  2. Something I tell my students is to remember to keep your fingers arched, and to practice pressing the strings with different parts of the finger.

    What a lot of new players tend to do is overcompensate and play with the very top of their finger right under their nail, because they don't want to hit the string above it. However, this ends up leaving the fleshy part of your finger laying all over the strings underneath.

    Moving your elbow to rotate your hand can help with some chords as well.

  3. This seems very close to the original track and might not fit the arrangement standards of OCR.  The judges tend to look at submissions on how you made them with your own ideas, not just the quality of the performance or how good it sounds.  It needs to have something that makes it stand apart from the original.

     

    It sounds great as it is, it does, but I didn't hear anything new and that's something the judges are going to look for.

  4. I can't find any setting to make threads display in reverse chronological order (newest post first, oldest post on last page). Halp!

     

    A bit of digging says that it's an ACP setting instead of a UCP setting.  So it's either chronological or reverse chronological for everyone or nobody.

     

    Kinda silly, things like that should be UCP since it's a users preference.

  5. I know it's been a while, but I finally got around to this.

    https://www.dropbox.com/s/f0ha9x0ecy3mt8k/mychoice.mp3?dl=0

    I haven't listened to any of the other mixes of it yet so I'm not sure how it measures up, I just mixed it how I would've imagined it should sound.

    I went for a ambient feel with a decent dose of reverb and delay. I let the percussion take a back seat so the instrumentation could have a little more attention since there wasn't anything incredibly complicated in the drums. I felt the acoustic guitar strums could carry a lot of the weight of the rhythm.

  6. From what I remember, you could place both inside the top just above the strings, one pointed toward the higher strings and the other pointed toward the lower strings to get a good full sound.

    It wouldn't be terrible to mic the bottom as well though, if you only have 2 mics I'd put them both inside but if you can get another, mic the bottom as well.

    As far as distance, since they're condenser mics you probably want a good 8-12 inches between them and the strings, maybe more.

  7. Mastering is probably something you'll not end up doing, but mixing is a different story.

    YouTube has a lot of good channels offering tips and tricks to get your mix sounding better, but honestly the best thing you can do is practice. There are good guidelines to follow, but in the end you have to go with what sounds right and not "this is a piano so I do this EQ and this compression".

    That said, starting with understanding EQ and Compression is your best bet at a good start.

    https://www.youtube.com/user/recordingrevolution has a good amount of information on various topics. Even if you don't like the sound he's getting, the information he gives about how things work is usually great.

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