

I think you'll need to make dramatic changes either to your room. The room doesn't have to be expensive to sound fantastic either. a very good mic and above in a fantastic sounding room is how you get your million dollar sound. a garbage mic is going to sound very good in a fantastic sounding room, and with the right mixing it has a chance to sound majestic. Not easy to do.Ī highend mic is going to sound garbage is a garbage sounding room, and it has no chance to sound majestic. you need to make sure your room itself sounds clear. yes, mic placement comes into play too, b/c you need to capture the sound the right way. But it starts with having the correct source signal in the first place. A better sounding room yields a better/ clearer product. I thought better equipment would yield a better product. I think we're all guilty of ignoring the obvious. the environment effects the sound entirely too much to ignore. Even if all of these places are dead silent. the choir is going to sound dramatically different depending on if you record them in a elementary school auditorium, a professional concert hall, or in a forest. You may need to construct an isolation space (not just a small booth with some acoustic panels up. you may need to record in a different space all together. it's b/c your room doesn't sound good and you may need to make significant changes that you don't really feel like working on. Some will give you a certain tone or impact you're looking for. Some may just take a little longer to tweak. I'd say at least 90% of the stuff out there, including stock plugins with the DAW, are good enough to get you there completely.

As long as you aren't buying from Radio Shack most budget mics and budget interfaces are quality enough to give a clear sound.

I’ve created this course with the beginner in mind, meaning we going to be using Stock plugins and all concepts will be simplified. If you want to learn how to Mix your Vocal tracks in Presonus Studio One Artist, this is the course for you.
