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View Full Version : Digital recorder for interviewing



Jess11
03-26-2005, 04:37 PM
I'm new to this, but am really hoping for some advice. I want to conduct some genealogical interviews and need some equipment! What I have done in the past is used my laptop (Inspiron 1150) and plugged a mic into that ("binaural"?? two mics that hook to a person's lapel and then the cords join and go into one jack on my laptop). This works ok, but I am looking for something that will allow me to record the interview on two tracks (one for each mic) and supposedly I can only get one track because I am using a line-in on a laptop or something.

So, is there something better out there? Should I get an ipod or a mini-disc player? How would something like that do as far as using two mics, downloading to my laptop (I've been recording to audacity, which records in something like an .aup file), sound quality, etc? Or is there something I can add to my laptop to be able to record in audacity but with two tracks?

Unregistered
03-31-2005, 10:48 AM
You can do anything that works, actually. I've used mini-disks, my Olympus DS-300 and plain old cassette recorders. Lately, people prefer digital because it's that much easier to edit the interview, if you're going to edit at all, and to burn a CD or DVD. An internet search on "oral history" will provide a plethora of information from the scholarly to the family history perspective.

morias
03-31-2005, 11:27 AM
This is probably technical overkill, but I'm silly like that. ;) There are portable USB audio interfaces available that can record individual tracks from separate microphones. Tascam, M-Audio, DigiDesign and others also bundle audio editing software with their devices. Tascam also makes a portable stand-alone multi-track recorder that can record to MP3 format and store the files on to compact flash cards. These solutions can get pricey and the included software can be a challenge to use. With the explosion of podcasting, you should be able to google lots of great advice on this and related topics.

Hope this helps!

-michael

Unregistered
04-16-2005, 11:17 PM
Hi anyone
I was wondering if anyone could give me a direction into pitch control.
What i want to do is tweak a few bum notes from singers, go into the wave and slightly sharpen or flatten it, i know the tascam has pitch control, but only for the entire track. Is it possible to do what i want, is there perhaps different software i can buy to aid this.

Unregistered
04-16-2005, 11:21 PM
sorry, typo



its a 2488