if you want to go down that "virtual instrument" route there are a few things to consider:Nazareth wrote:thanks for your help! i will see about getting cubase!
all those extra instruments run in the backgorund and all use additional processing power and memory. you will need a pretty chunky pc to get the most out of it... mine is a p4 1.7 with 1gb of memory. and i need to kill any unneccessary background stuff
also, you will need a decent soundcard - one with "asio" drivers.
this is a must both to get a goodquality sound and to avoid "latency" (the time lag between you or cubase telling the vst instrument to play a note and the vst instrument actually playing the note). my old soundcard was a bog-standard "gamer" soundcard and there was a huge lag... i bought an m-audio "audiophile 2496" and that does the trick. they used to be about £90 but have come down recently
http://www.m-audio.com/index.php?do=pro ... interfaces
and then of course you start getting into home-studio stuff, and so you will need decent speakers so that you can hear your mixes. i bought alesis m1 studio monitors... overkill probably but i like them
and then of course you need a mixing de...... aaaargh!
you see? it never ends
i like my toys