the4thImpulse wrote:Now getting a distinguished sound (like Daft punk or Deadmau5) is something that will take time and you will end up developing it without knowing so.
bartekko wrote:Step 1.) Get a DAW
Step 2.) ???
Step 3.) Profit
Gnarrkhaz wrote:I should have mentioned that i only work with Audacity so i don't have all of that fancy plugins and stuff at my disposal. : P Equalization is also very impractical there. You can't just loop something and fiddle around with knobs while you're listening (or can you?).
Expy wrote:I can understand if you don't have the money for a professional DAW (although I used the FL Studio demo for a few months), but I would think something like LMMS would work better... Meh, I don't know.
Gnarrkhaz wrote:LMMS doesn't recognize my audio input so i can't record anything. The synths don't work either. Maybe my soundcard is too trashy, who knows.
DJ Pon-3 wrote:(turn up the mic volume on your soundcard)
Gnarrkhaz wrote:This is not really about how to get a prefessional sound but rather how to get a proper sound:
When i first plugged my microphone directly into my pc the recording was barely noticeable. Probably just my crappy onboard sound i thought to myself (like i always do).
Well, apparently that wasn't the source of the problem. I bought some equipment and recording the microphone via XLR now produces the exact same result: Barely noticeable and when i normalize it it obviously boosts the background noises as well making them at least as loud as the recording itself. I tried it with Audacity and Reaper as well as with 2 different dynamic microphones.
Any ideas?
NavyBrony wrote:How does posting tutorials make you a sellout?
ph00tbag wrote:From the way he describes it, though, a noise gate might have unintended effects. His noise floor seems particularly high.
NavyBrony wrote:Can't give you much advice other than you may have to consider some soundproofing and/or a separate recording location.
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