5 Tools You Need To Make Music At Home

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Jose chipi estrada visionquest sound blog

Article by: Jose Chipi Estrada | Music Creator

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Collaborating is essential as an independent musician…

…and technology has allowed marvelous distance-collaborations in the last couple of decades, but it used to be either too complicated or too expensive. Today it has become quite accessible and reliable to collaborate, and not only that but because of the latest circumstances, even mandatory.

Fortunately, now you don’t have to be a recording engineer or network assistant to achieve it, and we’re going to help you do it. Today, here’s our 5 Essential Tools You Need To Produce And Collaborate From Home.



1. Setup Your Home Studio

The basics are, a microphone, an audio interface, a desktop or laptop of any kind, reference speakers or monitoring headphones, MIDI keyboard and an acoustically treated room. If you’re a singer or an acoustic instrumentalist, then focus on getting the best microphone you can afford.

Also treat your room, try to remove all the echo you can, check some videos or articles on how to do so, you don’t need to spend much money on it, but you need to do some furniture re-arranging. If you’re a producer a nice MIDI keyboard and a powerful computer would be the ideal and some good headphones because treating your room properly for mixing would take some cash off your wallet.

And finally, you need the highest speed internet you can afford, you will find that transferring files and having online sessions will feel much more comfortable with a stable connection.


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2. DAWs and Plug-ins

This could be overwhelming, fortunately almost all of them offer free trial versions except for my recommendation for you. Logic Pro X would be my choice if you can afford it and more importantly if you own an Apple computer since it won’t run in any operating system.

There are many other DAW’s that you can use but they’ll be more expensive and maybe a little harder to use like Pro Tools, Cubase, Ableton, etc. There are also cheaper ones like Reaper for only $60 and free ones like Cakewalk and Waveform which you can use to record your ideas quite proficiently.

There is a special mention for collaborating and that is Soundtrap. You can try it for a month free of charge and they have subscription plans. They offer a web-based platform with real time collaboration, which means many people can be logged at the same time and record at the same time in the same session.


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3. Conferencing Rooms

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You’ve probably have heard many people using Zoom for work or school, well it turns out it will be useful to you too. With apps like Zoom, Google Hangouts, Skype, etc. you can do songwriting sessions, exchange ideas and have barnstorming meetings to plan the new strategies with your band members.


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4. File Transfer and Storage

This is an important yet forgotten one. The easiest way to share your projects is just to send the audio stems through file transfer sites like WeTransfer, but those services eventually delete your files and you can’t get them back if you don’t have them backed up.

So, I recommend that if you’re short on money get all of them, Dropbox, Mediafire, Google Drive, Drive One and similar services, with a free account of each one of those you can store up to 15 to 20Gb of audio or more. The best option is to actually invest in paying a pro subscription from one of those so keep everything in just one place.

A special mention goes to Gobbler, which offers direct integration to DAWs like Pro Tools and Cakewalk Sonar and promises to include more soon. It has a free version that offers 5GB and then you can hire its services if you want to expand your storage.

5. Remote Software

If you want to go pro, then you have to increase your investment and spend some money in specialized software. One of the first applications you want to consider is a Plugin called Audio Movers, it will allow you to share your DAW sound to remote clients or collaborators.

They would be able to hear in high definition with very little latency. It’s a subscription service and only for monitoring and listening. You can use this software with the likes of Zoom to share your DAW screen while you’re mixing or recording and have a more complete experience.

To do remote recordings there are other tools like Sessionwire, Source-Connect, Steinberg VST Connect for example that will virtually connect your DAW to your collaborator’s DAW or allow them to connect directly to your session and have real-time recording sessions. Some of them are subscription based and some are one-time purchases like Steinberg VST Connect (for Cubase only).

Summary:

There you go, if you manage to get at least from 1 to 4 you’re set to collaborate with anyone you want from wherever you want. So, let’s keeps those tracks recording and the music flowing! How will you use these tools in your workflow? I’d love to hear from you.

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Jose chipi estrada visionquest sound blog

Article by: Jose Chipi Estrada

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