ACOUSTICALLY SPEAKING I may have mentioned here before that I've been dissatisfied with the sound of my recordings, mostly due to the ungodly racket that my Zareason machine makes. Loud as a lawnmower, it requires me to use alternate (and ungainly) methods to make decent recordings. Oh, I've mulled a-many methods in my time, but I've yet to come to any satisfactory conclusions. Did I talk about my homemade micbox? I must have. Assuming I didn't, though, it's a cardboard box with a cardboard mic stand inside, lined with bedfoam. It's purpose was to block the noise of the Zareason machine enough so I could make a decent recording without that bulldozer in the background. And it does exactly that. Unfortunately, it also sounds like I'm recording from within a muffled box. We're not after reality here. So, today I trimmed off three of the sides to this thing, save only the back and the bottom, and a framework of cardboard all around, leaving the internal foam exposed. It now makes my voice sound awesome! No muffled box to be heard. Just me and...you guessed it: the Zareason machine. All that helicopter noise is back. Again, it seems I can have one (that is, no computer noise OR good vocal quality) but not the other at the same time. To get the absolute BEST sound, I had to put a pillow and blanket over my head and record using my eeePC, running Puppy Linux. For a couple of reasons, this little machine is capable, but also really limited in its capabilities. And my goal is to improve on all that, naturally. My basic procedure here is a bit refined, then. I can't say improved, necessarily, though I'll likely use this box in conjunction with the eeePC method of recording for the time being (sans the blanket -- way too awkward): I mean, I WANT to use the Zareason machine for recording; and I want to record in this room. It seems elusive, though, this chase after good sound quality. I KNOW what can be achieved, even with my modest equipment and skill set -- I just haven't been able to achieve it all at one time. I can interface my software with my computer, and thereby gain the convenience and power of using a decent desktop machine for recording; I can eliminate the noise of said desktop with a micbox; i can record with a micbox without a disturbing boxy sound; I can record nicely on a (mostly) silent eeePC. Yet none of these approaches is close to perfect. I have big issues with them all. So, all said and done? The search goes on. Monday, February 28, 2011 (c) 2011 lostnbronx CC BY SA 3.0 lostnbronxATgmailDOTcom