David, I can't really give you first hand information, as I am on a Mac. However, both the choice of software and of hardware depends very much on what you want to spend and what you want to get.
If you want to go really professional, the first choice software at the moment seems to be Sequoia. Samplitude seems to be the slightly lighter version. Sequoia is now the choice of many classical record companies and music producers like WDR (biggest classical music producer in Germany). Wavelab seems to be the choice for a smaller budget. On the hardware side someone has already mentioned that SoundBlaster is not really the first choice. I'd look into a USB device. The Tascam devices seem to be quite popular. I use an ESI U24 and am very happy with it, but I am aware that this also does samplerate conversion, which means that the source is not necessarily transfered bit by bit. For me the thing has a lot of other advantages, and the quality is very good. I would not get one of the Roland/Edirol devices, I have heard a lot of negative feedback. Johannes On 30.06.2003 10:50 Uhr, LGS-Europe wrote > I am looking for a way to edit recordings for cd's on my computer. So I will > need a way to get the data in from a DAT-recorder, and software to do the > actual editing. It will be for classical music: single track recording, no > sound manipulating needed, just cut-and-glue the good parts. I understand > SounBlaster cards have the right connectors and might be bundled with > adequate software. I'm on WinXP. Any experience out there? > > Any help will be appreciated. > > David -- http://www.musikmanufaktur.com http://www.camerata-berolinensis.de _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
