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Using Your Portable Studio

Using Your Portable Studio
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Using Your Portable Studio

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This unique book, by award-winning record producer and recording engineer Peter McIan, is full of professional studio tips and tricks adapted to the new breed of portable studios. Includes a "cookbook" of over 25 recipes."

 
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Product Details
Author:Peter McIan
Paperback:300 pages
Publisher:Amsco Publications
Publication Date:December 31, 1996
Language:English
ISBN:0825614376
Package Length:11.84 inches
Package Width:8.97 inches
Package Height:0.94 inches
Package Weight:2.53 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 8 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:5.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

5A book for the poor and talented ...  Nov 17, 2005
If you know nothing or very little about recording, thie is THE book to get. Psychedelic Tunesmith asked the appropriate question: were you thinking of getting another book?

What I particularly like about this book is that McIan writes for an audience with a severly limited budget. There are many magazines and books that write about recording as if their readers have thousands of dollars to spare.
Secondly, McIan teaches recording from a conceptual standpoint. In other words, he teaches from the stance that the idea of recording is an old princple and all technologies are forms of this principle: capture the sound waves on an impressionable medium; to retrieve the archive, reverse the process
There is an emphasis on cassette-tape portable studios but I think that has to do more with when the book was published. Even those working with digital mediums can benefit from this. Besides, years from now, digital mediums will be discussed as a dated, old-fashioned technology.

McIan constantly stresses that you should do the best with what you can get your hands on and that knowledge can often compensate for mediocre equipment. If you only have enough money to buy one book on recording, this is the one to buy.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5You CAN Learn From This Book  Aug 24, 2004
I have a lot of experience in live sound but just about zilch in recording. This book has helped me in such ways that it has even improved on my live sound by making you think about what you're doing before you do it, ie., micing acoustic instruments or setting up for an 'unplugged' session with vocals to different ways to mic a piano.

I would recomend this book to anyone who want to learn more about recording. Whether at home doing it, or at the pro studio on the other side of the console, this book can answer some questions before you start.

As far as some thinking that this book is dated, not everybody can afford to fork out $1000 or $2000 dollars for a decent digital console/hard disc system. I can't. I still have and use and original TASCAM 488 Portastudio, that came very reasonable by the way, so the sections on portable studios is very helpfull to me.

Overall, I give it five stars. If you want to record at home for fun or for yourself, this is a must read!

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

4Dumbed-down version of Musician's Guide to Home Recording  Aug 18, 2001
If I hadn't just read 'Musician's Guide to Home Recording', another book from Peter McIan and co-author (Larry Wick?), I would have liked this title better. This book just expands on a small portion of 'Musician's Guide'. 'Musician's Guide to Home Recording' contains almost all of the info in this book and a whole lot more. If you gotta pick one over the other, get 'Musician's Guide'. Best advice is to get 'em both, but be sure to read this title first, it makes a good primer for the other.

5 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5Are you thinking of buying a different book?  Jun 26, 2001
Man, I've read 'em all and this is the champ home studio guide. I used to think it was McLan's first-"The Musician's Guide to Home Recording", but he's outdone himself on this one. I love it.

11 of 11 found the following review helpful:

5A valuable guide from an accomplished engineer/producer!  Jan 05, 2001
Anyone interested in engineering and producing their own recording will find a wealth of information regarding techiniques and implementations for microphone, guitar, bass, keyboards, midi drum kits....including how to develop a "true" mix.

Concepts provided within are ideas you will only hear from someone who has lived it!!

This book is a great resource to help you start your projects armmed with knowledge and understanding of key studio practices.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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