Recording

Audio interfaces

An audio interface does two things:

  1. It converts analog signals created by a mics\/headsets into digital streams suitable for recording.

  2. It converts digital streams sent by computers or mobile devices into analog signals suitable for headphones\/headsets and speakers.

If you have a USB mic or headset, the audio interface is built in.

If you have XLR mics, you'll need to buy an audio interface.

Input

Price

Inputs

Interface Type

Phantom Power

$100

2 XLR

USB

Yes

Mixers

I'm Team Audio Interface (or recorder, although you can't do a mix-minus Skype setups with a Zoom H6). But in an attempt to be fair and balanced:

Mixer

  • ☑︎ Physical knobs and sliders are cool and fun

  • ☑︎ If compressor/limiter, useful for live/live-to-tape scenarios

  • ☒ Built-in USB output typically only 2 channels

  • ☒ Built-in A2D hardware typically offers mid-range quality

Audio interface

  • ☑︎ Captures one track per input (easier to process, edit)

  • ☑︎ Typically better A2D hardware

  • ☑︎ Typically supports better sample rates/resolutions

  • ☑︎ Allows for a far more compact setup, easier to store/transport

  • ☒ Clumsier for live/live-to-tape scenarios

Software

iOS

Mixers

Mixer

Price

Inputs

Interface Type

Phantom Power

$230

4 XLR

USB

Yes

Single-enders vs. multi-enders

Example scenarios

One person + USB mic

Traditionally, podcast recording setups included a mixer, whose job is to mix several audio inputs — for example, multiple mics — into a stereo output suitable for recording.

Lately, "mixer-free" setups are becoming more popular.

Processing

(TBD)

Tips & Tricks

  • DO record and save and edit on your primary drive (vs. an external or network drive). You can always copy or move files after.

Last updated