What equipment do you need to make a recording studio at home? about how much would it all cost?

Posted: April 30, 2010 – 5:21 am


At the very least, you could get a little digital 8-track recorder from Fostex or Tascam for probably $300-400. Then you’ll need a couple mics, cords, etc. If you want to record more than a couple things at a time I would suggest buying a little 8 or 16 channel mixer. Behringer is pretty good to start with. You could get that for probably about $300 or less.
Or you could go the computer route and buy an interface. You’d still probably want the mixer, as audio interfaces with more than 2 channels can be pretty pricey.
All in all, you could get a decent starter setup for under $1000. Just keep adding to it. The most important thing is to learn how to properly use the equipment. Buy some books or check out some sites like http://www.recording.org – that site has a great forum you can learn a lot on.
Good luck!

MAG vs Jesus Christ who would win?

Posted: April 30, 2010 – 5:19 am

JBL is an American audio electronics company currently owned by Harman International. It was founded in 1946 by James Bullough Lansing. Their primary products are loudspeakers and associated electronics. There are two independent divisions within the company — JBL Consumer and JBL Professional. The former produces audio equipment for the home market while the latter produces professional equipment for the studio, installed sound, tour sound, portable sound (production and DJ), and cinema markets.

[edit] History
James B. Lansing founded JBL the year after leaving Altec Lansing as their Vice President of Engineering in 1945. The company was first called Lansing Sound, Incorporated, and dated from 1 October 1946 and then changed its name to James B. Lansing Sound. The first products model D101 15-inch loudspeaker and D175 The high frequency driver. The D175 remained in the JBL catalog through the 1970s. Both of these were near copies of Altec Lansing products. First original product was the D130, a 15-inch transducer for which a variant would remain in production for the next 55 years. The D130 featured a 4-inch flat ribbon wire voice coil and Alnico V magnet. Two other products were the 12-inch D131 and 8-inch D208 cone drivers.

The Marquardt Corporation gave the company early manufacturing space and a modest investment. William H. Thomas, the treasurer of Marquardt Corporation, represented Marquardt on Lansing’s Board of Directors. In 1948 Marquardt took over operation of the JBL. In 1949 Marquardt was purchased by General Tire Company. The new company was not interested in the loudspeaker business and severed ties with Mr. Lansing. The company was reincorporated as James B. Lansing, Incorporated, and moved to its first private location on 2439 Fletcher Drive, Los Angeles.

A key to JBL’s early development was Mr. Lansing’s close business relationship with its primary supplier of Alnico V magnetic material, Robert Arnold of Arnold Engineering. Arnold Engineering extended favorable terms and deep credit to Mr. Lansing. Robert Arnold saw JBL as an opportunity to sell Alnico V magnetic material into a new market.

James Lansing was noted as an innovative engineer, but a poor businessman. For the next 3 years Mr. Lansing struggled to pay invoices and ship product. As a result of deteriorating business conditions and personal issues, he took his own life on September 4, 1949. The company then passed into the hands of Bill Thomas, JBL’s then vice-president. Mr. Lansing had taken out a $10,000 life insurance policy naming the company as the beneficiary. That allowed Mr. Thomas to continue the company after Mr. Lansing’s death. Soon after, Mr. Thomas purchased Mrs. Lansing’s one-third interest in the company and became the sole owner of the company. Mr. Thomas was responsible for revitalizing the company and spearheading a remarkable period of growth for the two decades following the founding of JBL[1].

Early products included the model 375 high frequency driver and the 075 UHF (Ultra High Frequency) ring radiator driver. The ring radiator drivers are also known as "JBL bullets" because of their distinctive shape. The 375 was a re-invention of the Western Electric 594 driver but with a Alnico V magnet and a 4-inch voice coil. The 375 shared the same basic magnet structure as the D-130 woofer. JBL engineers Ed May and Bart Locanthi created these designs.[2]

Two products from that era, the Hartsfield and the Paragon, continue to be highly desired on the collectors market.

In 1955 the brand name JBL was introduced to resolve ongoing disputes with Altec Lansing Corporation. The company name "James B. Lansing Sound, Incorporated" was retained, but the logo name was changed to JBL with the distinctive exclamation point logo.[3]

The JBL 4320 series studio monitor was introduced through Capitol Records in Hollywood and became the standard monitor worldwide for its parent company, EMI. JBL’s introduction to rock and roll music came via the adoption of the D130 loudspeaker by Leo Fender’s Fender Guitar company as the ideal driver for electric guitars.

In 1969, Bill Thomas sold JBL to the Jervis Corporation (later renamed Harman International) headed by Dr. Sidney Harman. The 1970s saw JBL become a household brand, starting with the famous L-100, which was the best-selling loudspeaker model of any company to that date. The 1970s also saw a major JBL expansion in the professional audio field from their studio monitors. By the end of the decade recording studios in the United States used more JBL monitors than all other brands combined. The JBL L-100 and 4310 control monitors were noteworthy, popular home speakers. In the 1980’s the L-100, 4312 and others were updated with aquaplas-laminated midrange and woofer drivers, and a titanium-deposited tweeter diaphragm, the new designations being the L-80T, L-100T, L-120T and the flagship L-250ti. To test speaker drivers, JBL in Northridge used the roof as a

No one beats Jesus kiddo.

What music studio software is better? Cake Walk Sonar 7 or FL studio 9?

Posted: April 30, 2010 – 5:19 am

I’m looking for an affordable and reliable music studio program. Right now I’m leaning for FL studio 9 ( fruity version) as opposed to Cake walk Sonar 7 (XL)

Help?

I think FL Studio is better and the price is reasonable. FL Studio is a full-featured, open architecture, music production environment capable of audio recording, composing, sequencing and mixing, for the creation of professional quality music. The FL Studio philosophy is creative Freedom:
Free your audio – Instruments can be routed to any mixer track.
Free your mind – Choose your preferred workflow, compose using the step-sequencer or piano roll.
Others agree with this too http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090407213748AAR4mR8

What Brand Is Best For A Recording Studio?

Posted: April 30, 2010 – 5:19 am

I’m building a recording studio and i’m not sure what brand is best for the equipment. I’m looking for good quality and a nice sound, but i also have a budget of $3,000. What do you recommend?

Sony MDR-V700DJ Studio Monitor Series DJ Headphones

Samson G Track USB Condenser Microphone with SP04 Shockmount and Adjustable Desktop Mic Stand

Nady 4-Channel Powered Stereo Mixer w/ 250 Watts

you can get the right speakers their to

and for the sudio program you can use

cubase, logic, reason,fl studio, thier is alot most you have to pay for but if you use fl studio the demo version is the same as the full version the only difference is no saving but you can still make a beat and export it or make a beat record on it then export but basically you just can’t exit off before you export it or it aint gone save

To iMac or Not To iMac? Small home recording studio…?

Posted: April 27, 2010 – 3:35 am

I currently use a dell prescission t4700 for my home recording, top of the range at the time but have had nothing but problems with it, always breaking down, very slow sometimes, its big and clumpy, noisy etc..

Then one day I seen the sleek new iMac, it looks great, no big cpu has 4gb ram 3.33ghz etc and i want to get one…

Does anyone know from experience if it would be suitable for a small home studio. I want to run protools, a handful of decent plug-ins and when recorded i usually only take up about 16-24 tracks.

Would the iMac handle all this? Or should it be avoided?

Any help would be great, thanks

Absolutely, home studios are one of the key things Macs were made for. My MacBook with 2gb ram and 2.4ghz can support this kinda stuff, and an even better Mac would just get the job done easier.
If you have any Mac questions at all you can eMail me.

MAG or Chris Benoit who is a better example of fatherhood?

Posted: April 27, 2010 – 3:34 am

JBL is an American audio electronics company currently owned by Harman International. It was founded in 1946 by James Bullough Lansing. Their primary products are loudspeakers and associated electronics. There are two independent divisions within the company — JBL Consumer and JBL Professional. The former produces audio equipment for the home market while the latter produces professional equipment for the studio, installed sound, tour sound, portable sound (production and DJ), and cinema markets.

[edit] History
James B. Lansing founded JBL the year after leaving Altec Lansing as their Vice President of Engineering in 1945. The company was first called Lansing Sound, Incorporated, and dated from 1 October 1946 and then changed its name to James B. Lansing Sound. The first products model D101 15-inch loudspeaker and D175 The high frequency driver. The D175 remained in the JBL catalog through the 1970s. Both of these were near copies of Altec Lansing products. First original product was the D130, a 15-inch transducer for which a variant would remain in production for the next 55 years. The D130 featured a 4-inch flat ribbon wire voice coil and Alnico V magnet. Two other products were the 12-inch D131 and 8-inch D208 cone drivers.

The Marquardt Corporation gave the company early manufacturing space and a modest investment. William H. Thomas, the treasurer of Marquardt Corporation, represented Marquardt on Lansing’s Board of Directors. In 1948 Marquardt took over operation of the JBL. In 1949 Marquardt was purchased by General Tire Company. The new company was not interested in the loudspeaker business and severed ties with Mr. Lansing. The company was reincorporated as James B. Lansing, Incorporated, and moved to its first private location on 2439 Fletcher Drive, Los Angeles.

A key to JBL’s early development was Mr. Lansing’s close business relationship with its primary supplier of Alnico V magnetic material, Robert Arnold of Arnold Engineering. Arnold Engineering extended favorable terms and deep credit to Mr. Lansing. Robert Arnold saw JBL as an opportunity to sell Alnico V magnetic material into a new market.

James Lansing was noted as an innovative engineer, but a poor businessman. For the next 3 years Mr. Lansing struggled to pay invoices and ship product. As a result of deteriorating business conditions and personal issues, he took his own life on September 4, 1949. The company then passed into the hands of Bill Thomas, JBL’s then vice-president. Mr. Lansing had taken out a $10,000 life insurance policy naming the company as the beneficiary. That allowed Mr. Thomas to continue the company after Mr. Lansing’s death. Soon after, Mr. Thomas purchased Mrs. Lansing’s one-third interest in the company and became the sole owner of the company. Mr. Thomas was responsible for revitalizing the company and spearheading a remarkable period of growth for the two decades following the founding of JBL[1].

Early products included the model 375 high frequency driver and the 075 UHF (Ultra High Frequency) ring radiator driver. The ring radiator drivers are also known as "JBL bullets" because of their distinctive shape. The 375 was a re-invention of the Western Electric 594 driver but with a Alnico V magnet and a 4-inch voice coil. The 375 shared the same basic magnet structure as the D-130 woofer. JBL engineers Ed May and Bart Locanthi created these designs.[2]

Two products from that era, the Hartsfield and the Paragon, continue to be highly desired on the collectors market.

In 1955 the brand name JBL was introduced to resolve ongoing disputes with Altec Lansing Corporation. The company name "James B. Lansing Sound, Incorporated" was retained, but the logo name was changed to JBL with the distinctive exclamation point logo.[3]

The JBL 4320 series studio monitor was introduced through Capitol Records in Hollywood and became the standard monitor worldwide for its parent company, EMI. JBL’s introduction to rock and roll music came via the adoption of the D130 loudspeaker by Leo Fender’s Fender Guitar company as the ideal driver for electric guitars.

In 1969, Bill Thomas sold JBL to the Jervis Corporation (later renamed Harman International) headed by Dr. Sidney Harman. The 1970s saw JBL become a household brand, starting with the famous L-100, which was the best-selling loudspeaker model of any company to that date. The 1970s also saw a major JBL expansion in the professional audio field from their studio monitors. By the end of the decade recording studios in the United States used more JBL monitors than all other brands combined. The JBL L-100 and 4310 control monitors were noteworthy, popular home speakers. In the 1980’s the L-100, 4312 and others were updated with aquaplas-laminated midrange and woofer drivers, and a titanium-deposited tweeter diaphragm, the new designations being the L-80T, L-100T, L-120T and the flagship L-250ti. To test speaker drivers, JBL in Northridge used the roof as a

This is just silly. MAG is because he wouldn’t kill his children.

I’m building a music studio. What advice can I give my architect at this early stage?

Posted: April 27, 2010 – 3:34 am

We’re building a new house and I’ll have a room for making music. The architect has asked for some guidance on characteristics of the room and I’d like to send her in the right direction. What should I tell her?

if your going to play live drums, insulate the walls with dense foam.
If your going to mainly record and use an electronic kit, you don’t have to do much except build a relatively sound proof vocal booth.

In My Studio- Eminem (Music Video)

Posted: April 26, 2010 – 2:50 am

plezz comment and enjoy

Duration : 0:7:0

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HOME RECORDING STUDIO(EASY SETUP)..!!

Posted: April 26, 2010 – 2:47 am

I WILL BE DOING SHOWS ON MY USTREAM TO ANSWER LIVE QUESTIONS ABOUT studio equipment PLEASE GO FOLLOW ME ON THEIR IF YOU NEED HELP AND LIVE QUESTIONS ANSWERED!
http://www.ustream.tv/misstalentedmc

IM GIVING ALL MY SUPPORTERS..AND MUSIC SUPPORTERS…A GLIMPSE AT HOW MY MUSIC CENTER IS SET UP…IT ISNT DONE AND IM STILL ADDING TO IT

Duration : 0:8:17

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Design a Home Recording Studio – 5 Important Tips On Building Your Studio

Posted: April 26, 2010 – 2:46 am

http://tinyurl.com/home5studio

Many people wonder how to design a home recording studio.

You search around from site to site trying to find the best and cheapest manual or guide and ultimately you come up with nothing but a headache.

This is one of the best places to learn how to design a home recording studio because it’s a credible manual. This whole ebook shows you how to get everything you need for cheap.

I also made a whole video review of the guide and provided you with the 5 VERY IMPORTANT tips on home recording.

If you’re thinking about it, you’re thinking too hard. The guide on how to design a home recording studio is right in front of you.

Whether you’re just starting out in the industry, or you’ve been going in circles the whole time you’ve had your studio.

You’re on the right video.

Learn how to design a home recording studio here:

http://tinyurl.com/home5studio

All picture files from sxc.hu (free stock photography)

Duration : 0:1:48

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