Home Studio Thoughts!
When I first started with a home studio setup back in the late seventies,
it was an expensive and complicated proposition, involving reel-to-reel
tape decks—preferably 4 or 8 track—DAT (Digital audio
tape decks), high quality cassette decks (sound llike an oxymoron?),
turntables and music libraries on LP vinyl, and later on, CD recording
decks, plus a mixing board with phantom power, monitor speakers, power
amp, outboard gear like preamps, reverb units, compressors, EQ rigs,
and more.
Back then, a decent microphone for voiceover work started at around
400 pre-inflation dollars…favorites being two dynamic microphones
the Sennheiser 421 and the Electrovoice RE-20. (The Shure SM57 and
SM58 were popular too, and less expensive, though they were primarily
used as hand-held mics for singers.) Those microphones are still around
today, and can be very useful in a home studio, but there are a lot
more choices than ever before. The microphones of today are much more
affordable than in years past too, with decent VO mics starting at
around one-hundred dollars. The quality of some of these hundred-dollar
microphones is surprisingly good. Good enough for government work,
and corporate work, and advertising work too!
I have purchased several Marshall MXL condenser microphones in the
last few years. These microphones are Chinese-made, and you’ll
hear some folks say the quality is not good, or is not consistent.
In my experience the quality is amazing for the money. (Okay, that’s
my opinion, and I’m not an expert recording technician, but
I am a guy that uses these microphones and far more expensive ones
every day in my work. I’d rather have use the Sennheiser 416
at 1200 bucks, or a Neumann U-87 at several thousand, but those mics
can be unrealistic for new voiceover actors on two levels: they are
prohibitively expensive to start, and they are so sensitive that they
can pick up the ants chewing on picnic leftovers across the street.
Think soundproof booth if you get a Neumann.
A new, and affordable, development in voiceover microphones for voiceover
folks looking to work—or at least audition—from their
home studios, is the USB mic. These are microphones that plug directly
into the USB port on your computer. Again, the quality is amazing,
and you can choose from USB versions of the usual suspects and more:
Marshall MXL, Blue, Audio Technica, Rode, Samson. I’ve frowned
on some of those makes in the past, but I’ve heard the sound
they produce for people I’ve coached and produced and I’m
a convert!
The principal drawback with a USB microphone is that you may not be
able to use a long enough USB cable to distance yourself from the
computer. Computers make noise.
The great thing about a USB microphone is that you can combine it
with the free audio software Audacity, and you’re ready to do
voiceover business.
SO ASIDE FROM ALL THE REMINISCING, WHAT’S THE BOTTOM LINE?
Today, a home studio capable of producing broadcast-quality audio
can range in cost from less than 200 to 1500 dollars and (of course)
up.
So what do you need, and what should you spend?
It depends on your budget and on what you expect—or hope—to
accomplish with your home studio.
The best equipment and software is a moving target with new technology
coming along all the time, which means you should research things
on the internet and at your favorite music store to see what’s
new right now. The good news is that prices seem to come down and
performance goes up. Now that’s a blessing of our electronic
world!What’s in a Home Studio?
Every home studio, regardless of budget, needs certain basics:
A quiet space, with a minimum of ambient and outside noise leaking
in on your recording. A cellar is good for this…a room inside
a cellar is better…an interior closet is okay too (I know a
national-level announcer who does promos for a major network from
his closet)…any quiet corner will do…I’ve recorded
auditions and jobs in dining rooms, living rooms, and motel rooms
while traveling.
You want to create a dead space (cue the Halloween music and skeleton
sound effects), without the “boxy” reverberant sound one
gets from hard walls and flat, parallel surfaces (think, “singing
in my tiled shower” and you get the idea of what we mean by
“boxy.” If you’re recording in a closet, leaving
some clothes hanging in it can make it sound quite dead, absorbing
rather than reflecting the sound waves. Breaking up parallel surfaces
with draperies, or even throwing a blanket over your head while recording
can work in a pinch (you might need a flashlight though, but don’t
be embarrassed, you won’t be the first VO actor to do that).
Remember, all this deadening stuff is to prevent the “boxy sound,”
it’s not going to do much to sound-proof your home studio. That
requires what we call isolation…keeping outside noises to a
minimum. For true isolation, you’ll need an interior closet,
a cellar with heavy concrete walls that isolate you from outside sound,
or a sound proof booth. Don’t worry too much though, for most
auditioning purposes, you’ll do fine with just a reasonably
quiet area.
You’ll want a computer-based recording system. In the recent
past this would involve a digital interface that you plug a microphone
into, and a USB or Firewire connection to your computer. For people
who want to learn to do advanced production I still recommend a good
interface, like the Pro Tools MBox, one of the M-Audio interfaces,
or the less expensive ART USB Preamps. These are good pieces of equipment
to own if you have aspirations to full production or more high-end
condenser microphones that use XLR connectors and phantom power. If
you want to do music as well as voicovers, that’s probably the
route for you. But the learning curve is steeper, and there’s
more to go wrong. If you want to play around with audio, it’ll
be fun. If you just want to record that audition and send it as an
mp3, or you’re just starting out and feel a bit overwhelmed…move
on to my next recommendation. Which is…
For most voiceover types starting out, the home studio simply involves
a USB microphone that plugs directly into your computer. That’s
the system I recommend for you to start with…a USB microphone
and the free audio recording program Audacity. (Google it, it’s
free) You can start playing around with Audacity before you invest
in a microphone, learning to record and edit with just the microphone
built-in on your computer.) Then you can add a decent USB mic, like
the Marshal MXL 990 USB microphone, Samson CO1U, Samson G-Track, the
Blue Snowball, the Audio Technica 2020, the Rode Podcaster microphone,
or one of dozens of other choices from quality makers…You can
do amazing things with a set-up like that!
I’d be a wary of USB microphones designed for Instant Messaging,
like the Logitech USB microphones that run as little as thirty dollars,
they might be good enough for the occasional auditioning—I know
voice actors who use them for that—but the quality is lower
and they are designed to be very close to your computer…which
means noise in the background. There are also some microphones that
plug directly into the USB port with no cable or a very short cable
(like the Blue Snowflake); again that seems too close to the noise
source for doing actual jobs.
The fact is, with the popularity of podcasting and home recording,
there are constantly new recording options coming up on the market.
It shouldn’t cost you an arm and a leg to get started. You can
check out various websites, including VOsites.com, to find out what’s
new and what’s good.
A Pro-Tools Mbox with a decent XLR large-condenser microphone by Marshall
MXL or one of its peers, a microphone stand, mic cable, and a pop-filter
to prevent plosive “p” sounds will probably set you back
5 or 6 hundred dollars all told. With that, you can learn to do just
about anything.
But with Audacity, and a decent USB microphone with a mic stand and
pop filter, you’re going to be able to audition via the web,
and even do basic voiceover jobs, and it will probably all run you
less than a couple hundred dollars.
I have used Audacity as a back up to Pro-Tools (which occasionally
does weird things at just the wrong time, like any good software program),
and the results were excellent.
You can google the lastest home studio info, check out websites (like
mine), or visit your local music store. Just be sure to specify that
you want to record voiceovers. It’s a little different from
the kind of equipment and software you might need for a band.
The beauty part is…there’s more to choose from for less
money with better quality than ever before. And since so much VO work
is being done over the internet these days, a home studio is a great
asset.
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