Setting Up a Studio from Scratch Part 2
With your computer and DAW now sorted, you’ll need to move on to peripherals such as monitors, plug-ins and controllers. Hollin Jones explains all.

Last issue we looked at the process of choosing a computer and a platform for music production as well as which Digital Audio Workstation you might choose for recording and editing. Then we discussed how audio interfaces work and what to consider when buying one. So, if you are just getting started in the music technology world, it should have answered at least some of the questions that can confront a newcomer to this arena. And if you were following the steps from the first part of this guide, you will now be at the stage of having a computer and a DAW running on it (or a hardware recorder) and also being able to get sound in and out of the system for recording and monitoring. That is the really essential stuff, without which you don’t really have a recording setup capable of professional results. It’s also the bare minimum that you need and once you are comfortable with how it all works, you will almost certainly want to explore the software further, add microphones, monitors and headphones or even MIDI control surfaces, not to mention plug-ins and virtual instruments.
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 85
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