a curiosity about spending money on gear when one's amateur.
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- KVRAF
- 5520 posts since 6 May, 2002
The 1st thing for amateurs to put money into, is an excellent monitoring system. (Genelec 1030A, HR824 etc.
2nd thing is excellent D/A converters to go along wit a 64bit Athlon DAW with basic MIDI controllers. www.mytekdigital.com A good monitoring system will help you to sound like less of an amateur.
Add your software at this stage.
Add your A/D converters after everything else. If you are not serious about producing music, the less expensive A/D converters should be just fine.
Add luxury/convenience devices like Mackie Control and C4 after you get all the bacics and programs.
2nd thing is excellent D/A converters to go along wit a 64bit Athlon DAW with basic MIDI controllers. www.mytekdigital.com A good monitoring system will help you to sound like less of an amateur.
Add your software at this stage.
Add your A/D converters after everything else. If you are not serious about producing music, the less expensive A/D converters should be just fine.
Add luxury/convenience devices like Mackie Control and C4 after you get all the bacics and programs.
Intel Core2 Quad CPU + 4 GIG RAM
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- KVRAF
- 2135 posts since 12 Jul, 2004 from Brave New World
shit. that's where I f**ked up, then. I bought an instrument first.electro wrote:The 1st thing for amateurs to put money into, is an excellent monitoring system. (Genelec 1030A, HR824 etc.
2nd thing is excellent D/A converters to go along wit a 64bit Athlon DAW with basic MIDI controllers. www.mytekdigital.com A good monitoring system will help you to sound like less of an amateur.
Add your software at this stage.
Add your A/D converters after everything else. If you are not serious about producing music, the less expensive A/D converters should be just fine.
Add luxury/convenience devices like Mackie Control and C4 after you get all the bacics and programs.
whatever was I thinking?
"Duct tape is like the force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together...." -Carl Zwanzig
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- KVRAF
- 1981 posts since 26 Oct, 2003 from Toronto
Atleast Intel bought an instrument first...
I paid $250 for an Air Guitar.
But after I got the Air Drums for $125 - so I saved a bundle on that.
I paid $250 for an Air Guitar.
But after I got the Air Drums for $125 - so I saved a bundle on that.
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
I've been an amateur musician for 20 years now, with no intention of ever turning "pro". A quick, far from comprehensive glance around my studio reveals:
Mackie HR824 monitors
Neumann microphone
MOTU 828MKII firewire interface
Martin acoustic guitar
Oberheim 2 voice
Korg MS20/MS2000R/Wavestation SR/ER-1/DW6000/KPR77
Nord Modular
FutureRetro 777
Alesis ION
Kawai K5000S
Doepfer A100 modular
Access Virus A
Roland MKS-70/Juno-106/JV-1080
Kurzweil K2000
Novation BassStation Rack
Emu Morpheus
Peavey Spectrum Synth
...the list goes on...
Being a "pro" has never been an issue for me. I collect synthesizers -hard and soft- because I like them. I feel no need to justify these expenditures, and thankfully my wife is very understanding. I say, if it makes you happy, go for it!
Mackie HR824 monitors
Neumann microphone
MOTU 828MKII firewire interface
Martin acoustic guitar
Oberheim 2 voice
Korg MS20/MS2000R/Wavestation SR/ER-1/DW6000/KPR77
Nord Modular
FutureRetro 777
Alesis ION
Kawai K5000S
Doepfer A100 modular
Access Virus A
Roland MKS-70/Juno-106/JV-1080
Kurzweil K2000
Novation BassStation Rack
Emu Morpheus
Peavey Spectrum Synth
...the list goes on...
Being a "pro" has never been an issue for me. I collect synthesizers -hard and soft- because I like them. I feel no need to justify these expenditures, and thankfully my wife is very understanding. I say, if it makes you happy, go for it!
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
You have Airdrums?!? Cool!Steven West wrote:Atleast Intel bought an instrument first...
I paid $250 for an Air Guitar.![]()
But after I got the Air Drums for $125 - so I saved a bundle on that.
http://www.synthony.com/vintage/airdrums.html
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
- KVRAF
- 3266 posts since 22 Sep, 2003 from under the sun
in the end, it's a question of budget.origami wrote: but among those who are in the same situation like me...do you actually buy gear like this or ever plan to do so?
can you afford it or not?
try to be honest with yourself when answering this question. otherwise you'll end up like me: broke...
- Beware the Quoth
- 35496 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
electro quoth The 1st thing for amateurs to put money into, is an excellent monitoring system. (Genelec 1030A, HR824 etc.
Why, exactly? Seems to me that spending a grand plus on one single part of a studio setup is exactly the last thing an amateur needs to start with.
In fact your whole post sounds like you're confusing the term 'amateur' with 'aspiring pro on a budget'.
Why, exactly? Seems to me that spending a grand plus on one single part of a studio setup is exactly the last thing an amateur needs to start with.
In fact your whole post sounds like you're confusing the term 'amateur' with 'aspiring pro on a budget'.
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
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- KVRAF
- 7936 posts since 18 Feb, 2003 from out there somewhere
I spent lots of money in the past on softsynths but I'm still using a very cheap host and a USB soundcard hooked up to an amp and good quality speakers. Works for me. I'll be spending much less this year on stuff for my studio. For me it's time to take stock and reassess where I'm going with it (which is nowhere fast)...
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- KVRist
- 450 posts since 2 Nov, 2003 from 'sunny' Gaylord, Michigan, USA
i spend quite a bit on equipment and software....and it's just a hobby for me..like i've got 8 or so marginal exercizes on soundclick, and i own novation ks4, pintech electronic drums, mbox, low/mid grade monitors, mackie big knob, and software? orion platinum, acidpro5, native instruments komplete2, all the refx stuff, all the dash stuff, waves musicians bundle, sparkfx machine, and so much more...man, i got alot of cash invested. i could have bought a harley (old and used), or a small boat or a snowmobile, or....just think about what you could do with, say, counting the computer maybe i have 5 or 6 grand wrapped up in it. people spend alot of money on stuff to have fun with. if you can do it, do it....you work for a living, you shouldn't have to justify every dime you spend. it's ok to have fun!
i sure do!
i don't play guitar yet, but next on my list is ni guitar rig and a walnut yamaha electric i saw at guitar center. the people in my apartment complex are going to love me!
i don't play guitar yet, but next on my list is ni guitar rig and a walnut yamaha electric i saw at guitar center. the people in my apartment complex are going to love me!
- KVRAF
- 9096 posts since 5 Feb, 2004
If you're not married, devote your life now to buying as much stuff you want in life now, because when you get a wife and kids, it's all over
Seriously, if you want it, get it. If you won't starve because of it.
If you have requests for Korg VST features or changes, they are listening at https://support.korguser.net/hc/en-us/requests/new
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- KVRAF
- 13444 posts since 14 Nov, 2000 from Hannover / Germany
No way! BONES is making up for a WAY better idol!HansM wrote: Oh my... I adored and respected both of you. Does this mean I have to choose only one as my idol?
There are 3 kinds of people:
Those who can do maths and those who can't.
Those who can do maths and those who can't.
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- KVRAF
- 5851 posts since 9 Jul, 2002 from Helsinki
If you buy something that you have to save for, and it still stretches your budget, it's true value to you is tenfold it's sales price.
I think buying one carefully picked hardware synth is a far better option than buying or downloading 10 soft synths. H/W keeps it's value (possibly even gains value!), and the chances that you'll take the most of it are possibly better than with a softsynth. (ok, I couldn't imagine my music without Crystal, and the second hand market for softsynths seems to be going nicely with ok prices so mileage varies)
I think a musician and an instrument need to be mentally connected- it's not enough to know how to play or to have good instrument - one has to "love" the instrument to make it sound beautiful.
and...men only really need some food, perhaps a roof and one working hand
Rest is luxury.
happy consuming,
.jontu
I think buying one carefully picked hardware synth is a far better option than buying or downloading 10 soft synths. H/W keeps it's value (possibly even gains value!), and the chances that you'll take the most of it are possibly better than with a softsynth. (ok, I couldn't imagine my music without Crystal, and the second hand market for softsynths seems to be going nicely with ok prices so mileage varies)
I think a musician and an instrument need to be mentally connected- it's not enough to know how to play or to have good instrument - one has to "love" the instrument to make it sound beautiful.
and...men only really need some food, perhaps a roof and one working hand
happy consuming,
.jontu
