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#1
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I want to configure a very basic beginners DAW, i.e. sequencing and
recording system on a older Pentium M laptop for a 13 year-old, with like zero budget, and I am looking for suggestions. She has an acoustic drum kit and sings. I'm thinking any old used keyboard with midi out could serve as a controller so I'll keep watching craigslist for that. I hope by plugging in a headphone jack I can disable the onboard speakers. I was hoping to setup a sample-based softsynth for sounds so everything is contained in the laptop but I'm not sure where to start. Any suggestions for freeware? I'm trying to avoid buying a sample sound module. The local swapshop has a Proteus for $75 (I think I paid $900 for one almost 20 years ago!) so that is an option but I'd rather not have outboard gear. Also need some sequencing software, and again looking for freeware or dirt cheap, I'd pay maybe $70 if it was easy for her to use. Might that also serve as the softsynth? Finally she'll need a USB interface for audio and midi, and I'd like to pay around $100. Suggestions? I have a couple old unbalanced mics she could use, or one of my SM57's if the interface supports XLR. She'll monitor all this with cans so I'll have to get a set of those, too. Thanks for any help you can lend! |
#2
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On Mar 3, 5:03*pm, "just bob" wrote:
I want to configure a very basic beginners DAW, i.e. sequencing and recording system on a older Pentium M laptop for a 13 year-old, with like zero budget, and I am looking for suggestions. She has an acoustic drum kit and sings. I'm thinking any old used keyboard with midi out could serve as a controller so I'll keep watching craigslist for that. I hope by plugging in a headphone jack I can disable the onboard speakers. I was hoping to setup a sample-based softsynth for sounds so everything is contained in the laptop but I'm not sure where to start. Any suggestions for freeware? I'm trying to avoid buying a sample sound module. The local swapshop has a Proteus for $75 (I think I paid $900 for one almost 20 years ago!) so that is an option but I'd rather not have outboard gear. Also need some sequencing software, and again looking for freeware or dirt cheap, I'd pay maybe $70 if it was easy for her *to use. Might that also serve as the softsynth? Finally she'll *need a USB interface for audio and midi, and I'd like to pay around $100. *Suggestions? I have a couple old unbalanced mics she could use, or one of my SM57's if the interface supports XLR. *She'll monitor all this with cans so I'll have to get a set of those, too. Thanks for any help you can lend! I use N track studio and I like it! for the most part.. Mark |
#3
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![]() wrote: On Mar 3, 5:03?pm, "just bob" wrote: .... Speaking of cheap DAW SW, I know a lot of folks get by with Audacity (may not qualify as "DAW", I dunno), but I have only briefly looked at that and N-Track Studio. I did play around with Krystal Audio Engine once and found it impressive for a "free for personal, educational and non-commercial use" thingie. http://www.kreatives.org/kristal If you can get by with free software for everything (and I honestly don't know if you can), that could boost the available funds for hardware (interface, an extra mic, a mic stand, one or two fiberboard panels, etc.). I also played around once with a soft controller called "Cantible" (sp?), and fed some free Poly synth plug-in to it, along with some free effects plug-ins, and thought it was a fairly useful tool. YMMV. I cannot offer much about interfaces. Just don't try to use Windows XP Media Center Edition with *any* audio interfaces. Maybe consider combining the interface role with a portable recorder (some products that do that are cheap, no?) for those times when capturing tracks from elsewhere is desirable, but a laptop is just too unweildy. I guess I'm not much help (and I'm not a MIDI kind of guy). But take it for whatever it's worth. -- Keith W. Blackwell (I do not speak for my employer or anyone else) |
#4
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just bob wrote:
I want to configure a very basic beginners DAW, i.e. sequencing and recording system on a older Pentium M laptop for a 13 year-old, with like zero budget, and I am looking for suggestions. She has an acoustic drum kit and sings. I'm thinking any old used keyboard with midi out could serve as a controller so I'll keep watching craigslist for that. I hope by plugging in a headphone jack I can disable the onboard speakers. With the small consumer-type keyboards, that used to be normal. How it is nowadays: I don´t know, but I´d guess it hasn´t changed. I was hoping to setup a sample-based softsynth for sounds so everything is contained in the laptop but I'm not sure where to start. Any suggestions for freeware? If your just looking for a very simple audio-only multi-track sequencer, I would suggest taking a look at "Kristal Audio Engine" (supports ASIO drivers and VST effects). It´s very stripped down and basic, but IMHO because of this just perfect for beginners. The "downside" is, that it has no MIDI functions at all. http://kreatives.org/kristal/ If you want to spend some money for an all-in-one audio + MIDI sequencer, take a look at the small versions of Sonar or Samplitude. They are quite cheap, but surprisingly good. Both programs are compatible with ASIO drivers and VST + DX plug-ins (for softsynths/-samplers + fx) - so they are compatible with the "standards" for home-recording/project studio DAWs. http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/HomeStudio/English/ http://www.magix.com/us/samplitude-music-studio/detail/ I'm trying to avoid buying a sample sound module. The local swapshop has a Proteus for $75 (I think I paid $900 for one almost 20 years ago!) so that is an option but I'd rather not have outboard gear. I would also try to avoid outboard gear as far as possible - especially for a 13 year-old beginner. There´s already enough other stuff to learn with DAW related functions... Outboard gear is fine, if you know what you´re doing. But combining outboard gear with a computer-based DAW is nothing for a beginner. She can still decide later, if she thinks she needs anything "real" (as opposed to "modeled" in software). Also need some sequencing software, and again looking for freeware or dirt cheap, I'd pay maybe $70 if it was easy for her to use. Might that also serve as the softsynth? Indirectly. You can load software-based synths or sampler plug-ins. There are tons of freeware available on the net. A lot is crap, but there´s also great freeware stuff out there. With a DAW sequencer software, that´s compatible with VST and DirectX plug-ins, you´ll be open to a wide variety of those. Finally she'll need a USB interface for audio and midi, and I'd like to pay around $100. Suggestions? Hmmm, you´ll probably have to spend a bit more for a 2-channel (with 2 mic preamps) + midi USB interface. I´d stay away from the Tascam US-122 or 144 - they´re nice devices, but tend to have quirky drivers. Without good drivers for your audio interface, you´re lost in the software DAW world. I have a couple old unbalanced mics she could use, or one of my SM57's if the interface supports XLR. She'll monitor all this with cans so I'll have to get a set of those, too. Any of the USB audio/midi interfaces I´ve seen, have XLR ins and headphones outputs. There are bundled versions of Cakewalk´s Sonar that come with such an interface. Otherwise buy something separately. Since I personally don´t use USB interfaces, I can´t really suggest something from personal experience. Anyway, M-Audio is a maker of such interfaces, with a reputation for good drivers. The "Fast Track PRO" is their smallest product with audio and MIDI. The "Fast Track ULTRA" has 4 mic inputs, which may be favorable for recording drums with up to 4 mics (2x overhead, kick, snare), but also some other additional features. The question is, if a beginner really needs those additional features. http://www.m-audio.com/index.php?do=...=USBinterfaces Hope that helps a bit, Phil |
#5
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Keith W. Blackwell wrote:
wrote: On Mar 3, 5:03?pm, "just bob" wrote: ... Speaking of cheap DAW SW, I know a lot of folks get by with Audacity (may not qualify as "DAW", I dunno), but I have only briefly looked at that and N-Track Studio. I did play around with Krystal Audio Engine once and found it impressive for a "free for personal, educational and non-commercial use" thingie. http://www.kreatives.org/kristal Or not quite free , though freely-available/usable is REAPER, which is much more of a real DAW. www.reaper.fm geoff PS Also mailto ![]() |
#6
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"just bob" wrote in message
... I want to configure a very basic beginners DAW, i.e. sequencing and recording system on a older Pentium M laptop for a 13 year-old, with like zero budget, and I am looking for suggestions. Try either n-track studio or Reaper. Peace, Paul |
#7
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On Mar 4, 1:37 am, "Paul Stamler" wrote:
"just bob" wrote in message ... I want to configure a very basic beginners DAW, i.e. sequencing and recording system on a older Pentium M laptop for a 13 year-old, with like zero budget, and I am looking for suggestions. Try either n-track studio or Reaper. Peace, Paul +1 If you had an old mac running OS 8 or 9, you could find/use Opcode's Studio Vison which was released without copy protection just before Gibson killed the company. Still around on some user groups. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#8
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I'm not a serious DAW user, but I occasionally have the need (more often
than not for a hardware review) to pretend that I'm working in the DAW environment. When looking around for an inexpensive program that did all the things I needed to be able to do, I ended up keeping Reaper. It handles ASIO devices, has a mixer graphic that sort of works like a mixer, supports VST plug-ins (including virtual instruments) and works with MIDI as well as audio. It's free to try. http://www.reaper.fm/ |
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