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Hi guys, just joined this cool site.

I bought myself a Kaossilator, and I tried to record stuff from it onto my laptop. It's just an ordinary Acer laptop, with no fancy sound card or anything.
So I went with a phono/jack cable and plugged it into the mic-in on the laptop, and then tried recording with Audacity. As long as I kept the bass down, it was okay, but the sound quality isn't really good enough. It is kinda distorted, or something like that.
Is there any way to fix this? Is it the hardware, the software, the cables? Or am I just to sensitive about sound quality...

I'd be grateful if you could help me to get better recording quality - suggest some software(Free? :D), unless it's the hardware that's wrong.

Thanks.

PS. sorry for my English, I know it's bad.

Comments

anonymous Thu, 02/19/2009 - 17:19

I'm surprised that you were able to get "okay" by connecting a line out to a laptop microphone input. (Because I've been there :) )

Lap tops have notoriously terrible sound cards, especially for recording. If you are plugging anything else besides a standard computer microphone it only gets worse.

Get an audio interface with a couple of inputs if you want to make music by yourself. Maybe something like an [[url=http://[/URL]="http://pro-audio.mu…"]M-Audio Transit USB[/]="http://pro-audio.mu…"]M-Audio Transit USB[/]

Codemonkey Thu, 02/19/2009 - 20:48

I'm not sure if I want to follow everything that I read on a PC screen these days.

Was on IRC, things got strange, I asked an 8ball-script if it knew where my car was.

It unfurled that I need to travel to New York in a millenium falcon to find my car - which, of course, is inside my fridge and next to my bed.

Oh, and it doesn't know what to do with my worst enemy, who I'll meet there.

anonymous Fri, 02/20/2009 - 07:15

By Jack I think you mean 1/4"?
Minijack, 3.5mm? Or the smaller ones like on video cameras?
Phono??? A phono plug is for record players... Wtf?

Most good mics have an XLR out, get something with and XLR in and you should be sweet, 1/4" TRS is for instruments like electric guitar.

1/4" TRS and XLR are what you're looking for.

Soundblaster stuff is for playing games and watching movies. Same as your onboard shit but with more flashy options. Codemonkey loves his sound blaster, ask him about it.

dave_p Fri, 02/20/2009 - 07:43

does musicians friend ship international?

http://pro-audio.musiciansfriend.com/product/Nady-SP1-Microphone-and-Stand-Package?sku=277031

http://pro-audio.musiciansfriend.com/product/Lexicon-Alpha-USB-Audio-Interface?sku=245507

a cheap simple studio for only 100$ USD
it will sound good enough to keep a casual user happy and learn the ropes, for a very small outlay of cash. the cubaseLE software that comes with the interface is really nice, and better than anything like audacity or reaper. you can actually get a lot done with that little setup.

anonymous Fri, 02/20/2009 - 08:09

Even if musicians friend ship international, I wouldn't like buying something outside the EU, because there's a risk that I'll have to pay tax of it, and then it might suddenly be 200 bucks. So I want something that's available in the EU.

So I need something with 1/4 TRS-in - right.
Can you name some cheap audio interfaces that has 1/4 TRS-in ? And do I need other software?

Update: I found the Lexicon Alpha USB interface on that Danish site I linked to before - aage.dk. It's 134 USD. I'll see if I can find it on some German or British store