Yes, you are correct. Ardour is what you need. You also need a good
sound card like an M-Audio Delta 44 (4 analog inputs, 24/96), Delta 66
(4 analog inputs, 2 digital, 24/96), Delta 1010lt (8 analog inputs, 2
digital, MIDI...), Delta 1010 (8, 2, MIDI, external A/D/A), ST Audio
(Hoontech) DSP2000 C-port (8, 2, MIDI, external A/D/A), or the Terratec
version (I can't remember the model number, it's Phase something or
other I think). Trying to get all the levels right with a mixer prior
to going to 2 tracks is a study in frustration. No matter how good you
get it you'll still wish you could play with the individual levels
later. The Delta 44 would be the bottom line for me.
Jan
On Sun, 2004-01-25 at 13:53, Livio wrote:
Il dom, 2004-01-25 alle 18:47, Guy Daniel CLOTILDE ha
scritto:
Hi
Livio wrote / a écrit:
I would like to set up my pc to record a cd of a
band.
I would like to rec single instrument at time and also all the band at
the same time.
What software i've to use?!
you can try, among others, audacity for recording and editing (really easy interface),
gnome-toaster ou xcdroast for burning the cd. You'd enjoy a well tuned kernel for
no-latency recording ( example: RedHat + Planet CCRMA packages)
What hardware i need?!
a mixing table, although I'm not sure to understand how exactly you want to record.
GuyCLO~
Audacity is quit good, i've tested it, but with this software I can
record only an instrument at time.
Assuming that i'm going to record one instrument at time (guitar, bass,
and so on) what i can do with the drum?! I need more channel to record
decently a drum. And assuming that i've got a mixerteble (i think it's a
"mixer" the one wich is used also during the concerts, sorry for my poor
english) to record the drum how can i later mix all the trucks?!
I need something like ardour.
I think i'm right, am i?