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> About To Switch To Mac...general Questions, Multitrack recording & mastering on Mac
EletrikGutar182
posté lun. 26 janv. 2004, 03:04
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I currently am, and have been, a PC user. I am making the switch to Mac this week. I am ordering a 14" iBook G4 (933 MHz, 40 Gig HDD, etc...)

I currently have a pretty basic setup involving a digital 8-track recorder that I record onto and then connect to my PC for mastering (SoundForge). I am thinking of downloading ProTools free to start off with, after I buy either the iMic or the Mobile Pre.

Will ProTools FREE work with OS X?

Would Garage Band be a good idea?

Will I be able to use the USB interface (probably the Griffin iMic...) easily with ProTools or any other software?

Does anybody have any other reccomendations besides ProTools?

As a fallback option, If I wanted to do mastering on the Mac as I did with soundforge, what is a good freeware or inexpensive mastering program I should use?

P.S., I am not a newbie when it comes to music and recording, so if there are any suggestions of good programs that aren't necessarily meant for beginners, That is fine.

Thanks in advance,
Alex
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jamester
posté mer. 28 janv. 2004, 08:07
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The way I see it, a midi controller board can always be added later for "in house" use. Meanwhile, save some money in the short-run.

The beauty of having a notebook daw is portability. When recording on location I want to travel as light as possible. Bag for the 'book and misc. stuff, 4 or 6 space rack, and some mics/hardware.

Keep the big clumsy controller and reference monitors at home; headphones and a mouse for the road! biggrin.gif
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EletrikGutar182
posté jeu. 29 janv. 2004, 05:10
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QUOTE (jamester @ Jan 28 2004, 07:07)
The way I see it, a midi controller board can always be added later for "in house" use. Meanwhile, save some money in the short-run.

The beauty of having a notebook daw is portability. When recording on location I want to travel as light as possible. Bag for the 'book and misc. stuff, 4 or 6 space rack, and some mics/hardware.

Keep the big clumsy controller and reference monitors at home; headphones and a mouse for the road! biggrin.gif

Just out of curiosity, what mic/usb interface are you using?
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dmrkh
posté jeu. 29 janv. 2004, 05:29
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Mhm, insightful question.
But what I want to appreciate 1st is jamester's pov, footloose and light. Whereas mine has been that of homebase wink.gif

I personally have passed on the 25-key combowombos with usb's infamous latency in favor of a 61-key MIDI board. Now that I'm seeking better inputs than that imic crap I took dry&unlubed, I'm inclined to acknowledge that you do get what you pay for.

So if my audio capture device can equally accomadate MIDI over firewire, then hi-end may be nece$$ary.
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jamester
posté jeu. 29 janv. 2004, 05:41
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well, I'm also still in the dreaming stage, but I will wake and join reality hopefully next month.

I am torn down the middle between the MOTU 896 and 828. One thing I don't like about the 896 is it only has XLR analog outs, so I can't patch it into home stereo systems. (well, maybe with a stereo 1/4-to-rca from the headphone out?)

I actually don't have reference monitors (yet), always used my good ol' Bose. I realize an external mixer would solve the problem, but that's one more thing to buy and take up space - and an outlet!

I record bands for demos often at their location, so it's cool to be able to go into their stereo system for listening back without headphones.

BUT, the 896 has 8 XLR's, and that's tha shiz for live band recording. The 828 and a couple stereo preamps would give you 6 XLR's for about the same $$$$.

OH, the CHOICES!!!! blink.gif
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