Submitted by OkManufacturer9271 t3_yi51fo in Music

I’ve wanted to make indie music for a long time now, I’ve thought of multiple different riffs and Melody’s on guitar and I really want to record some of my ideas. But I just don’t know where to start.

I’m wondering how I can start recording with minimal equipment and what software I should use. I understand that I may have to look into buying things like a midi or an audio interface.

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Chachables t1_iuh5p18 wrote

as you don't own all the needed equipment and instrumentals to record drums, bass, and anything else except for guitar, sadly, yes, you will need a MIDI controller so you can easily play what you have in mind for other instruments, in Digital Audio Workstations like Cubase or Reaper. MIDI controllers will use certain sound libraries (for bass sounds, drum sounds) which are either free or premium paid content. It's not hard, it's only harder until you start. I am a guitarist just like you, into music for a long time, been to music college, and still haven't managed to end a proper song because I never really tried. TLDR: Try.

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_plantknuckles t1_iuhgdla wrote

I know a guy who recorded an album in his bathroom on an iphone. It's a beautiful piece of work.

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Shadowsitter t1_iuhi6mk wrote

Free Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) like Garage Band for Mac - Free

Music Production Keyboard - $120 (link to one of the best to start with in my opinion)

Basic digital audio interface - $40

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$160 plus cables, monitors/headphones and other misc. and youve got your basics to create and produce all the songs in your head youcould want. As you progress, youll want higher end equipment but thats a pretty great set up to start with.

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GhstOfIncntOptimism t1_iujq0n6 wrote

Only read all this if you find yourself in a truly desperate place.
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I'm trying to do this too, but am maybe a little further down the line than you currently.

So, first off, don't expect to be immediately good at it. Go in with the "something is better than nothing" attitude.

You should start with an audio interface. I went with the audiobox, because it has inputs for instrument and mic cables. It came with an Ableton live lite subscription (DAW with some amp effects), which can be really confusing for some things, but has proven useful for just getting something down.

You might want to get a mic so you can at least communicate the feel of the song and if you don't have drums, you don't have a lot of time to burn learning to program, but can tap out a pattern, you might consider a cajon as a placeholder until you can actually allocate time for those things.

This (audiobox + mic + cajon + stand + cables) puts you in the $250 range (you might be able to find cheaper, but that's about what I paid in total). See Appendix 1 for what will happen if you go this route.

You will get writers block so make a folder that's just full of riffs that you came up with that didn't fit the song you were working on at the time. Call that folder your "Noodle Bowl" and argue with others that this was the best name for it.

Download an audio notes app on your phone and when riff ideas or cool vocal patterns come to you in the middle of the night, whisper them into the phone while trying to tap out the beat with it so it's less confusing in the morning. Argue with your partner/flat mate that this is "what it means to be dedicated to your craft". Accept that people need to sleep and find a compromise - that compromise will involve stealing off to the kitchen/bathroom at random hours. Cover the flashlight on your phone with your hand so you don't wake your partner, but have enough light to leave the room without stepping on the malamute you recently adopted.

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GhstOfIncntOptimism t1_iujql8d wrote

#Appendix 1

I'm going to include a lot of information here just in case you ever need it. This is basically a person who doesn't know how to use ableton(or any other DAW)'s guide to using ableton.

Things that you'll experience at this step:

  1. Trouble installing the audiobox driver and having to update the firmware.
    Google can help with this... some.

  2. Annoying latency issues

Maybe it's just me, but when I'm trying to put a song together I usually go one riff at a time and that means having to slide tracks around so they align correctly.

Stay in hamburger mode in Ableton and this will help, but under Options > Preferences > Audio (where you would have already been to select the AudioBox ASIO Driver) you can adjust the latency so it's a little bit closer, or offset enough that it's easy to move based on your scaling. You'll still have to move it though.

  1. I can't hear myself and it's not recording.

This could be an input output issue, check under Options > Preferences and make sure things look right there.

On the right side of the window where stuff is, mess around with this stuff until some combination works: select auto, change the combobox selection to 1 or 2, change the other combo to master, click the rectangle with the dot in it so it turns red - indicating that that's the track you're recording on.

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GhstOfIncntOptimism t1_iujvz7r wrote

#Appendix 2

On collaboration.

Make a google drive folder you can send links to or share with friends. Include tabs that and lyrics that pair with the tracks. Export songs to MP3s and used compressed folders when sending "stems" (the individual wav files that get exported from your DAW).

Drive runs out of space fast with WAV files. Delete after they've downloaded. The drive music player is horrible.

Even if you're good at playing by ear, tab things out.

If you're using weird techniques. Consider getting a webcam and uploading unlisted playthroughs to youtube so you can go back and watch yourself play each section. This will also get you familiar with the upload process and you can send the tutorials to your collaborators later on.

Consider making a private discord server where you and people you expect to collab with can share ideas and coordinate meetings/band practice.

There's a program called Blackhole you can use to hook output from some DAWs. This lets you play through stuff in video chats. That may not be necessary, but if you ever need to know.... etc.

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