Shopping for an interface
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Shopping for an interface
So yeah, I've decided to enjoy the future, quit living in the past, gave up on being one of those dudes that only fucks with tapes in 2019 and decided to give the digital game a shot, took a class on recording to learn about DAWs and sweet recording techniques. Now I want an interface. I've been toying with MIDI instruments and all that stuff and wanted to try it at home with my band so I got a fancy MacBook Pro, but need a good interface to go digital. Looking at 4 input ones for my band so I could try and get 4 tracks going at once if I have to, and
1. Resident Audio T4.
4 inputs for the band, thunderbolt 2 (for less latency?), MIDI inputs, sleek and easy to power. Nice and small, one cable, Ive really been stuck on this one.
Buuut I hear reviews all over the place with this thing. For the price it doesn't seem like the biggest miss because it probably can be returned, but I hear it really doesn't like working with new Macs and you need this "cable matters" thunderbolt 2-3 adapter. still $200 all together. Anyone ever fuck with one of these? or should I just avoid?
2. TASCAM "US" series.
The 4 AND 8 input one is in my price range, I've heard good things about these, and am interested. This guy is USB, so I don't have to worry about rolling the dice on a thunderbolt adapter that may or may not work.
3. BEHRINGER UMC404HD
Another affordable simple 4 input interface, also read promising stuff on these. The word Behringer kinda sketches me out though.
Any recommendations in the 200-300 range? I know the thunderbolt interfaces can get pricey, and they're all thunderbolt 2 anyway so I'm not trying to go crazy on one of those, would bite on that resident audio one though if someone has experience with it. Really just looking for something reliable and easy to use that doesn't produce much latency.
I've also read about the Focusrite stuff but it gets kinda pricey and I don't think it has MIDI inputs, any input on these too?
Thx homies
1. Resident Audio T4.
4 inputs for the band, thunderbolt 2 (for less latency?), MIDI inputs, sleek and easy to power. Nice and small, one cable, Ive really been stuck on this one.
Buuut I hear reviews all over the place with this thing. For the price it doesn't seem like the biggest miss because it probably can be returned, but I hear it really doesn't like working with new Macs and you need this "cable matters" thunderbolt 2-3 adapter. still $200 all together. Anyone ever fuck with one of these? or should I just avoid?
2. TASCAM "US" series.
The 4 AND 8 input one is in my price range, I've heard good things about these, and am interested. This guy is USB, so I don't have to worry about rolling the dice on a thunderbolt adapter that may or may not work.
3. BEHRINGER UMC404HD
Another affordable simple 4 input interface, also read promising stuff on these. The word Behringer kinda sketches me out though.
Any recommendations in the 200-300 range? I know the thunderbolt interfaces can get pricey, and they're all thunderbolt 2 anyway so I'm not trying to go crazy on one of those, would bite on that resident audio one though if someone has experience with it. Really just looking for something reliable and easy to use that doesn't produce much latency.
I've also read about the Focusrite stuff but it gets kinda pricey and I don't think it has MIDI inputs, any input on these too?
Thx homies
Reading things over, I'd probably just get a Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 for a sub-$300 interface, MIDI and all.
Focusrite has hammered out a lot of the early kinks in the line, and as long as the internal buffers in your DAW are set to kill, you'll have a fine AD/DA converter with a Scarlett. Also, as you won't be running 8+ inputs at once, will be USB will be plenty fast and I wouldn't worry about needing Thunderbolt.
Focusrite has hammered out a lot of the early kinks in the line, and as long as the internal buffers in your DAW are set to kill, you'll have a fine AD/DA converter with a Scarlett. Also, as you won't be running 8+ inputs at once, will be USB will be plenty fast and I wouldn't worry about needing Thunderbolt.
You don't, but the original post was planning to record 4 tracks at once so needs 4 inputs. I still use a line 6 ux1 for my guitar as I like amp farm and the behringer is for my synths and fx.sunshiner wrote:Noob question: why do I need a 2 input interface for home recording over a 1 input (intrument+mic) one?
And what kind of daw are you planning to use?
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I have the 2i version of this and it’s fucking MINTultratwin wrote:Reading things over, I'd probably just get a Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 for a sub-$300 interface, MIDI and all.
Focusrite has hammered out a lot of the early kinks in the line, and as long as the internal buffers in your DAW are set to kill, you'll have a fine AD/DA converter with a Scarlett. Also, as you won't be running 8+ inputs at once, will be USB will be plenty fast and I wouldn't worry about needing Thunderbolt.
sounds bloody lovely and very easy to use
Nice, I was thinking about using one of the presonus ones because they make studio one, but I think I'm about set to order up one of these Focusrite's here soon. Either gonna snap up that 6i6 or the 18i8.
Also found out my E-drum set has MIDI in and out. Can I monitor this in real time like a midi keyboard? Was doing some research and it looks like it'd be a lot of fun to just record my e-drums with MIDI so they're easier to edit. Anyone have any experience with that?
Also found out my E-drum set has MIDI in and out. Can I monitor this in real time like a midi keyboard? Was doing some research and it looks like it'd be a lot of fun to just record my e-drums with MIDI so they're easier to edit. Anyone have any experience with that?
I had a Scarlett but had to ditch it as I had serious latency issues with it. I replaced mine with a Roland Quad Capture and it's been rock solid. When I googled the issues I was having with the Focusrite it seemed to be a fairly common issue. Basically if it works its fine, if it's remotely weird on your setup take it straight back. Mine was def a hardware issue.
you just fuckin said you cant record weezer because you cant fart around at home.Doog wrote:Can anyone recommend a 12+ track interface compatible with Mac OS?
I'm looking at getting a half-decent Macbook Pro for developing/farting around at home, and would love to be able to record all drum tracks on one machine, preferably for not an additional grand.
dots wrote:incesticide
you really need 12 inputs just for drums or are you going for full band tracking? I use a Tascam US-1800 with my Mac mini, nothing to compare it to but it works and was cheap for the amount of inputs.Doog wrote:Can anyone recommend a 12+ track interface compatible with Mac OS?
I'm looking at getting a half-decent Macbook Pro for developing/farting around at home, and would love to be able to record all drum tracks on one machine, preferably for not an additional grand.
'Farting around' meaning the same farting-around I do on my current desktop machine; not recording vocals. This is for future sessions where I've got studio/practice spaces booked that are not my house and will definitely not involve farting-around.robroe wrote: you just fuckin said you cant record weezer because you cant fart around at home.
I mean, I've already got that little Zoom R-16 (8 inputs tho) thing I could use as an interface, but I really wanna make the leap to make it worthwhile. I did 9 drum mics for the last Doog thing, but had to use my work Macbook for the room mics; kinda messes with the whole 'hear everything together' aspect of engineering. I'd love to be able to do live sessions with it, just as an option.Nick wrote:you really need 12 inputs just for drums or are you going for full band tracking? I use a Tascam US-1800 with my Mac mini, nothing to compare it to but it works and was cheap for the amount of inputs.
Weirdly, the US-1800 did come up in my searches earlier; I'd be happy enough putting a snare-under mic straight to 1/4" input, leaving me with 8 XLR inputs, with entire phantom power for 4 condensers.
Will give it a proper look, thanks man!
A Focusrite Scarlett 18i20 or Clarett 8Pre with the matching OctoPre would give you 16 balanced XLR inputs but might be more than you want to spend?
Fran wrote:I love how this place is basic as fuck.
ekwatts wrote:I'm just going to smash it in with a hammer and hope it works. Tone is all in the fingers anyway.