I have a Delta 1010 sound card VApro1 (tried VA2 but had a lot of hicups so I went back to VA1), SF5, and AcidPro3. I am somewhat new to digital recording but have been playing with this stuff for about a year now. So I am familiar w/ most of the interfaces and now would like to get down to serious mixing and mastering. It seems to me I lack a sufficeint knowlege of desired levels for digital recording. Is there a document or website or any of you who can point me in the right direction?
Here is a couple of my specific questions:
1) Do I want to get all my input levels as close to zero as possible but never, never, never go past zero (clip)?
2) If that's the case what do I do when I want a quite part. I ask this because I have a song that has a very quiet begining and a really loud chorus and ending. When I burn it to CD the entire song plays way softer than the other songs. Should I use SF to bring up the levels of the quite parts and count on the texture of the music to provide the sense of quiet I'm looking for? And by having my louds and quiets closer in range will that allow me to bring the over all level of my mix louder as I attempt to acheive radio or factory volume from the entire CD?
3) Are there some db guidelines as to not go below a certain db even in a soft part?
Here is the learn as I go method I'm using right now. Sometimes after recording a track in Vegas I'll bring it into SF to add effects or compression or Volume maximize. I don't this this all the time. Should I? Should I do the same proceedure on each track before I try to mix and master? Then when I have my tracks down before I render them (save as in VA1) I play through the song and make sure there's no clips on the master bus. If there is I adjust the volume on the offending track or tracks until I can get through the whoole song with no clips. While doing this I'm not paying a lot fo attention to how low the other signals are. Should I? Then I render the .wav and open in SF and do a volume maximise.
I'm getting some very good quality but I'm sure I could get better with some "standard operating prodeedure" guidelines.
Also when I burn the CD I'm getting clicks at the end of each wave just before the next song starts. I'm just adding the wav files through the HP CD writer soft ware as VA1 doesn't have "create CD" option. Although I just realized that SF5 does. Do you think if I created CD through SF it would eliminate the click between tracks or is there something I missing?
Thanks. Todd
Here is a couple of my specific questions:
1) Do I want to get all my input levels as close to zero as possible but never, never, never go past zero (clip)?
2) If that's the case what do I do when I want a quite part. I ask this because I have a song that has a very quiet begining and a really loud chorus and ending. When I burn it to CD the entire song plays way softer than the other songs. Should I use SF to bring up the levels of the quite parts and count on the texture of the music to provide the sense of quiet I'm looking for? And by having my louds and quiets closer in range will that allow me to bring the over all level of my mix louder as I attempt to acheive radio or factory volume from the entire CD?
3) Are there some db guidelines as to not go below a certain db even in a soft part?
Here is the learn as I go method I'm using right now. Sometimes after recording a track in Vegas I'll bring it into SF to add effects or compression or Volume maximize. I don't this this all the time. Should I? Should I do the same proceedure on each track before I try to mix and master? Then when I have my tracks down before I render them (save as in VA1) I play through the song and make sure there's no clips on the master bus. If there is I adjust the volume on the offending track or tracks until I can get through the whoole song with no clips. While doing this I'm not paying a lot fo attention to how low the other signals are. Should I? Then I render the .wav and open in SF and do a volume maximise.
I'm getting some very good quality but I'm sure I could get better with some "standard operating prodeedure" guidelines.
Also when I burn the CD I'm getting clicks at the end of each wave just before the next song starts. I'm just adding the wav files through the HP CD writer soft ware as VA1 doesn't have "create CD" option. Although I just realized that SF5 does. Do you think if I created CD through SF it would eliminate the click between tracks or is there something I missing?
Thanks. Todd