
I’ve been a bit slow on posting reviews of the last couple of Tube Microphone, but it’s time to catch up. Overall, the Tube Microphone was great, and I have no problem recommending Tube Microphone for anyone wanting one.
I LOVE THIS Tube Microphone
how do I hook up a microphone pre amp to my computer?
I have a rode nt1000 condenser Tube Microphone mic with mogami mic cable and a art tube pre amp.How do i hook up the amp to the computer...do i need to buy cables?ifso what kind of cables?....thanks
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I’ve never heard of anything like that but maybe it is some kind of humidifyer to help keep is throat from drying out.
It is not legal for muslims or any religion to broadcast in a neighborhood without a permit allowing to broadcast at a decent hour of the day like between 10am to 2 pm. Without a permit stating when they will broadcast and end it they can all be arrested for disturbing the peace
well you can webcam it without sound but sometimes theres a video maker on the webcam where you can use a mike if not just dub in sound with microsoft movie maker
I find that Camtasia and DemoCreator can make screen recording with audio from computer.DemoCreator can detect the recording device of your computer, and you can select the right recording input. Here are 3 input sources to choose: Microphone, Rear Input, and Stereo Mix. The audio recording option of Stereo Mix enables you to record what you hear from your computer. http://www.sameshow.com/democreator/tutorial/add-sound-to-demo.html#107
You’re talking about a musical vocoder, I think, although depending on what ’strange/cool sounding’ noises come out you might be talking about a Sonovox.There’s a good explanation here:http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid183_gci213626,00.htmlWikipedia gives a fairly detailed description of vocoders here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocoderand Talk boxes (Sonovox) here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk_box
I’ve done a lot of home guitar recording onto my computer. I have a Traynor tube amp with excellent sound. However getting that sound into a recording can be difficult.The classic approach is to get a good instrument recording mic (the Shure SM57 is the traditional favorite) and placing the mic right up to the speaker grill but not right in the center of the speaker for the best sound. Then run the mic into the recording equipment. Set the levels right on the recoding equipment and record. With a computer everything is the same except you plug the mic into the computer (into the microphone jack) and use your recording software, such as Cubase or Cakewalk Sonar or whatever. Actually Guitar Tracks Pro from Cakewalk is a good way to go if you’re just doing guitar.But getting a good sound is tougher than you may think and depends on having the right mic, proper mic placement, acoustics, recording levels, etc. Sometimes an easier way to go is to get an a software plug in for your computer recorder such as Amplitube that emulates famous amps so you can plug your guitar straight into the computer and not worry about fooling around with mics.
I was looking in musicians friend and AMC alot too, until I found a page on a successful home studio in portland. he has been a successful engineer for a lot of different bands, or singers in several different genres. his page says this is what he uses and points a link to here:http://www.fmraudio.com/RNC1773.htmit does have good reviews, and is a great price. I am pretty sure this is the first compressor I will use. People have even said that when a customer requested the studio master the project for them, they used this as a mastering compressor with better results than they ever would’ve expected.here’s a link to that guy’s studio page. you can see yourself.http://www.happyfuntimerecording.com/*************************************************************EDIT: Glad i saw this before it goes into voting. Yes, I started doing just rap before I got into playing instruments for other genres. Back then I would use someone elses instrumentals, and I tried recording the same way you’ve been doing it. In addition to a quality microphone (phantom powered large dia. condenser mic is a must for good vocal quality) a compressor/limiter is your best friend. When I was trying to record my lyrics over instrumentals, it was hard to mesh the tracks together. Alot of the time it sounded like I had done just that, recorded vocals over an already exicsting track. The compressor/limiter will help out a lot with that, as well as amplify quiet lyrics or whispers to the same volume as your other vocals, without added noise.Vocals is what I would use it on the most, being that most of my music is midi, electronic drums, or sampled instruments, etc. which means those soundclips have already been ‘compressed’& worked to their best quality and don’t need anything additional done to them.When I originally answered this question, I didn’t realize you were looking for a preamp. I justt saw where you mentioned compressors, and your links were just going to the home page of musiciansfriend. When you’re using a good mic (the condenser I mentioned earlier) they need phantom power. So if you’re plugging straight into the pre-amp instead of a phantom powered mixer or standalone recorder, make sure yours has the power supply for the mic (cuz I’m sure you’ll want to get a quality mic eventually)I can’t provide any specific pre-amp, but I’m on a site that is very good for peeps setting up home studios or into recording.Here is a great thread that should help you figure things out more in the pre-amp selectionhttp://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=149227&highlight=recommended+pre+amp
That’s a lot of amp you bought!Most likely, there’s a preamp tube that going or gone. At least, that’s the easy problem to solve.It’s also possible that an interstage coupling capacitor is bad. When those go, they will cause problems like you describe.It could also be an issue with a solder joint, although I very rarely see that with Mesa gear.You should have a tube layout chart (if not, download the manual from Mesa). I would swap preamp tubes with the other clean channel. If the problem moves, it’s the tube. If it doesn’t, it’s something else in the channel.Good luck.Greetings from Austin, TxKen
Assuming you’re using Windows, go to start > all programs > accessories > entertainment, then hold down shift and click on both volume control and sound recorder. In the volume control window, go options > properties, click the radio button that says recording, then make sure all of the boxes are checked and say ok.Now check the box for stereo mixer. You can now record. Just start playing the audio and click the red circle on sound recorder, then when your done save it and you can now do anything with that audio file.Hole this helps!~Dcallstar51
I think it unscrews from the base (where the goldtone metal hits the black). However, you can always get him a new windscreen at:http://www.samash.com/catalog/showitem.asp?ItemID=44019if you want. The metal mesh screens dent all the time so I wouldn’t feel badly about it if I were you