Check out the quot;How Toquot; tutorial below which explains the way you can record your clips and get them onto the Internet for everyone to enjoy.
most people on here use to host their mp3's...it's a pretty good site because you can listen to low speed/hi speed/and actually download the mp3 as long as the poster allows it...basically if you can get your song recorded on a cd you can probably get it on the net!
i'll speak from my own personal experiences...(i'm talking from memory here, the pc i'm on right now doesn't have the programs that my home pc does, so anyone feel free to correct me, take away, or add to this!)
1. after i get the music recorded on disc i go to a music program such as musicmatch jukebox and convert it to mp3 and download onto my pc...
2. to convert from wav (the format that songs are on cds) to mp3 can be done by first recording your song on your pc...on mm (musicmatch)
3. put the cd in your drive and open up mm if it's not your default player, click on browse and find the drive that the disc is in...click on it and open the file, it should start playing in mm...stop the song from playing by depressing the quot;stopquot; button (layed out like any music player), then highlight the song title which should be written in the little box beside your controls, then click record...it might take a few minutes depending on the length of song and speed of your computer.
4. once the song is recorded, it should appear in another box at the bottom of the page...go under quot;filequot; or quot;editquot; (can't remember off the top of my head) and their should be a list which includes quot;convertquot;...click on that and it will bring up two seperate boxes which include location lists (ie. cdrive, adrive, computer, documents amp; settings, etc). at the bottom of the left box it has a place to click to tell the program what you are looking for (what type of file...ie. wav, mp3) and under the right hand box, what you are wanting to convert it to.....in this instance you are looking for wav and wanting to convert to mp3.
5. once it is found, highlight it and it should appear in the left hand box, then choose a destination in the right hand box...(if you plan on doing this frequently then maybe create a file to save them all in for easy access later) and click quot;convert filequot;...should take to long at all?!
6. after that is complete bring up the soundclick hompage. find the link where it says quot;new artist sign upquot; then click the link that says quot;sign me up (as musician or band). follow the pretty straightforward easy instruction for the registration. all this will take a little while, but it's not difficult.
CONT'D BELOW
I use SoundClick and it works pretty well for me... as for a primer - it's really pretty simple - it has a kind of a bouncing ball approach - just follow the instructions... and it's FREE!
Rick
CONT'D
7. once this is complete, go to band administration and click the link for quot;add new songsquot; it will give you a statement to click agree to...then it will ask you if you want to go quot;robustquot; and upload from your pc or go quot;slurpyquot; and upload from another site.....obviously in this instance you want quot;robustquot;!
8.it will then ask for a song title and then ask you to place it in a genre...if you want people of like minds to hear your songs...get it in the right genre where it can thrive! it will ask you for some more info...like song description, story behind the song, whether you allow someone to download the song to their own pc and stuff like that!
9. then click proceed, then a page about allowing others to quot;usequot; your song comes up...do what you want here then click proceed.
10. then the upload page pops up...click browse and open the folder you saved the Mp3 in during the conversion, click the song and open it then click upload mp3...and voila...you're on the net...it may take some time for your first song to actually clear and be able to be heard...i can't remember, it's been awhile since i did it!
11. then you can go back to band administration...click on your band name...then click on the link called quot;musicquot; next to quot;your urlquot; and your music page should pop up...highlight the address at the top of your screen...right click...copy...then paste in your tips and clips thread...and voila...all your SD buds can hear your stuff!!!! like this....
from : localhost/ON!!!
1. PC
First of all you need a PC. Theoretically, any PC should work but the ones with a faster CPU, bigger RAM and faster disk will work better!
2. Soundcard
Practically, any reasonable soundcard (Soundblaster and above) should do. I have recorded for over a year with a crappy AC97 laptop soundcard with reasonable results. Of course, if you have the $$, you can spend over 1000$ for a good soundcard with a lot of quot;bitsquot; which will record a lot of things you cannot hear anyway.
3. Modelling Amp
There are several ways to record your guitar: through a microphone, through a D.I. box or through a modelling amp. There are some pretty good modelling amps out there (POD, Vamp, J-Station, DGStomp....) and they produce some decent results for recording. As opposed to a microphone, Modelling amps generate a relatively high voltage signal and should be connected to the quot;Line-inquot; input of your soundcard. Make sure that you know how to enable the various inputs of your soundcard (consult the manual).
4. Microphone
Now this is the way the real tone guru's record those subtle nuances full of harmonic complexity which most of the normal people don't hear! There is an industry standard microphone called Shure SM57. It is a directional mike and has a slightly pronounced midrange which helps to cut through the mix. Most guitars over the years have been recorded with a SM57. It should cost around 100$ or 100 Euros in the old continent. Microphone are not powered i.e. they do not produce an amplified (strong) output signal so they require a microphone pre-amp. These can vary in price and quality. Some soundcards (like my Tascam) have an integrated microphone pre-amp. Another way of amplifying the mike signal is to use an ordinary mixer (which can sometimes be cheaper than a pre-amp). Just plug the mike into one of the channels and then connect the mixer output to the Line-In of your soundcard.
5. Recording Software
This is the PC-bases recording studio. These software packages are Adobe Audition, Cakewal SONAR or Home Studio, Acid, Ntrack,and similar....Typically, the Sw will have quot;tracksquot; where you can record and playback one or more instruments. The idea is that you record all the instruments separately and quot;mixquot; them down into a quot;bandquot; recording. More often, you will just record your guitar over a quot;backing trackquot; (drums, bass and keyb only). All you have to do is load the backing into say quot;track 1quot; and then you play it back whilst recording your guitar in say quot;track 2quot;. You can then mix the 2 tracks together and that it! Or is it? Check out the next topic
6. Mixing/Recording
Typically, it take 5 minutes to record a tune and 55 to mix it down! Seriously, the way you quot;post-producequot; your recording can really influence the final quality. Some advise: always record the guitar with no effects and try to add these through the mix. Why? Because it's impossible to reduce (for example) a reverb or delay effect once it has been recorded. Be aware that often what you hear whilst you are recording and what you record can sound different and hence you will have to adjust your recording. Adding some mids always helps the guitar cut through the mix. After having mixed down the tracks, adding some compression and reverb always makes the recording sound a bit more professional. Most SW recording programs have the basic effects: reverb, delay, EQ, compression.
7. MP3 Compression
When you mix down a recording, typically you will generate a .wav type file which is just too big to be posted on the web (gt;10MB/minute) hence some compression is required. Most recording sw's offer the possibility to compress to a .mp3 file. You can set the quot;bitratequot; of the final recording and 128kbit is a typical quot;webquot; standard (file size of about 1MB/minute)
(cont.)
(cont..)
8. Web hosting
Ok, now you have the file with your recording, but where do you post it? Well, some people have their own web sites and understand html and ftp and that stuff so they don't have any problems there. Other can use free music hosting site like Soundclick (or from : localhost/. Just register and upload your file and then post the link of your page over here.
Enjoy!
Cool. I can do some hosting. I am putting together a few pages that are dedicated to Duncan related subjects.. mainly clips and pics: site under construction
from : localhost/is better than soundclick i think, cause you dont have to be a member to download the songs
Thanks guys. This totally helps... Tv.
Wierd.. soundclick has taken like a week to process and it still hasnt given me my access code and ive tried plenty of times.
Originally Posted by TimmyPageWierd.. soundclick has taken like a week to process and it still hasnt given me my access code and ive tried plenty of times.
Hey Timmy, I'd try to do it all over again from scratch with new everything. I think that's what I had to do.
-LR
I have most of my playing on home made CD recordings. Can I use SoundClick to transfer my CD recordings to the Internet? Thanks for any info.
Originally Posted by StratcatI have most of my playing on home made CD recordings. Can I use SoundClick to transfer my CD recordings to the Internet? Thanks for any info.
No You can't.The only thing you can do is ripping it to mp3's and don't let people download it.I think you can even sell the songs but i never did!
Just use CDEX to turn the CD tracks into MP3s, then upload them to Soundclick.
Originally Posted by HossCONT'D
7. once this is complete, go to band administration and click the link for quot;add new songsquot; it will give you a statement to click agree to...then it will ask you if you want to go quot;robustquot; and upload from your pc or go quot;slurpyquot; and upload from another site.....obviously in this instance you want quot;robustquot;!
8.it will then ask for a song title and then ask you to place it in a genre...if you want people of like minds to hear your songs...get it in the right genre where it can thrive! it will ask you for some more info...like song description, story behind the song, whether you allow someone to download the song to their own pc and stuff like that!
9. then click proceed, then a page about allowing others to quot;usequot; your song comes up...do what you want here then click proceed.
10. then the upload page pops up...click browse and open the folder you saved the Mp3 in during the conversion, click the song and open it then click upload mp3...and voila...you're on the net...it may take some time for your first song to actually clear and be able to be heard...i can't remember, it's been awhile since i did it!
11. then you can go back to band administration...click on your band name...then click on the link called quot;musicquot; next to quot;your urlquot; and your music page should pop up...highlight the address at the top of your screen...right click...copy...then paste in your tips and clips thread...and voila...all your SD buds can hear your stuff!!!! like this....
from : localhost/ON!!! nice tnx
Hello all,
I am following the Prado blog tutorial and everything works well, except the ListPost page. This page loads succesfully, but doesn't show the posts on the page.
ListPost.php
Code: php
- Apr 05 Tue 2011 21:04
Song Posting Tutorial
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