netmouse: (Default)
netmouse ([personal profile] netmouse) wrote2008-08-25 04:40 pm

Oh internets... know anything about USB microphones?

Subpress has hired me to do an audio version of a story and I want it to sound good. Yanni recommended I get the best USB mic I can find but... I'm lazy and don't like shopping. Anyone here know what I should get?

[identity profile] mishamish.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
What's wrong with a standard mini-RCA microphone? I recorded an audiobook (which never got published for COMPLETELY unrelated reasons) with a mini-RCA headset Mic and it sounded pretty good...

ya know, after I passed it through Adobe Audition and edited out a bunch of stuff...

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Using a mic plugged into the sound cards means you're dependent on the A-to-D converters on the sound card. Those converters have to run in a truly hostile environment, in terms of electrical noise at a huge range of frequencies, there inside the computer case.

A good ordinary microphone plugged into an external USB/Firewire sound interface gets around that problem, as does a "USB microphone" since it has the A-to-D built in. Of course then the question of how good that A-to-D is becomes relevant.

For recording human speaking voice, you don't need wonderful equipment, and keeping actual background sounds down probably makes more difference than picking equipment carefully.
ext_13495: (Default)

[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2008-08-26 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
mm, I hadn't heard of this "external USB/Firewire sound interface" of which you speak. I have some decent mics that SFOHA uses. They certainly have more range and better response than the built-in mic on the computer. But plugging them directly in seemed to have a noise/translation issue.

Can you recommend a particular USB/sound interface for a standard mic?

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2008-08-26 02:19 am (UTC)(link)
I know Sound Blaster makes one, and M-Audio make several (some of which can also serve as untethered stand-alone recording stations). Seth mentions using an external digital recorder for the reduction of background noise, which makes excellent sense. People should prefer audio recording advice from Seth to advice from me by a big margin, he's done a huge amount more of it.

[identity profile] mishamish.livejournal.com 2008-08-26 01:38 am (UTC)(link)
Wow... that makes a HELL of alot of sense, and I wish I'd known it when I was recording. Still, a couple of friends who run a LARP want my help recording/mixing/cleaning up their Bard songs (not because I know HOW... just because I have the software), and that will come in WORLDS of handy.

THANKS!