Guitar Radio Mic

How to connect a guitar or bass on a computer
All cities in the world has one or two fully dedicated guitarists and bassists. These people spend disciplined countless hours improving their craft. A local musician community is composed of a small group of dedicated people and fewer people with different tastes in music. For the musician truly passionate, sometimes it can be frustrating. The dedicated guitarists and bassists of these communities, often exceeded the capacity of local teachers, and are therefore, in his own following their musical heroes. Although guitar tab books and guitar lesson DVDs help, trial and error becomes the main method.
If you are an individual such, there is a feature that the musician may have forgotten: the Internet. Now, please do not misunderstand. I know you already found on the Internet. You use the Internet every day and you have probably found countless guitar tab sites, guitar lesson sites, band classified sites and so on. You have learned much about the Internet. His eyes are found on the Internet but your music?
When you connect your instrument to your computer, you connect your music to the rest of the world community of musicians. Outside, the Internet, unlike his hometown, many people just like you, who want to hear your music. They are as dedicated as you, they are in the same music, they are their peers, no doubt, and want hear what you're working.
This article teaches how to connect your guitar or bass right into your computer to start sharing your musical ability with the world community of music on the Internet. We are assuming you have an electric guitar, bass guitar or guitar with pickup.
Overview
Turn your computer around and look at his back. You should see a headphone style mini walkman on a shiny steel plates there. In fact, you'll see 3 mini connectors. If you look closely, they have recently recorded pictures beside them. One is the image of a microphone, is a picture of headphones, and some image others you do not know what it is. What is a microphone and headphones is not the line-in. His guitar has a cable 1 / 4 inch which is too large to fit in the mini headphone jack. So you'll need an adapter that converts the plug a quarter-inch mini jack. You can find this type of card in your local electronics store. In the U.S., Radio Shack is your best bet.
The following are three scenarios that describe how to connect the instrument to your computer.
State Average
Here's the deal: your guitar is supposed to connect to the line-in. But his guitar is not loud enough to play straight on a line-in. Then you have to put an effects pedal with a volume control between the PC and your guitar. That way you can give your guitar enough of a boost volume to hear it well on your PC.
Poor situation
If you do not have an effects pedal or something to give your guitar a volume small increase, then the line in the method will not work. Your guitar will be very quiet. If this is the case, you have to connect your guitar to the mic input instead. The guitar is very high for a microphone jack. So you have to connect the guitar down to write it correctly. Even so, it will not sound very good. Computer microphone jacks just do not sound good. But it works.
Ideal Situation
Ideally, here's what you want to do: get a mixer, plug your guitar into your amplifier, microphone amplifier in a sound-proof room. Turn it up high. Mix their effects on signal to the mixer and turn the blender out on the line line on your computer. If you have any equipment for that, then I suggest you get one more item: a plate of studio-quality audio. These cards have improved circuits and software that will significantly improve the sound of their records and the flexibility of your system.
I hope this article has been useful for you and your music inspires and fulfills you throughout a long career and happy. I also hope you will join a musician community on the Internet and get much satisfaction out of it as I have.
About the Author
Jon Broderick is a guitarist from California who has been an online musician since 1998. You can find Jon featured in online Music Competitions and online Guitar Lessons at major music websites.
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