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It's easy to record stuff on a modern
Mac. All you need is an audio controller that plugs into
one of the computer's USB ports.
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technofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and
commentaries, continuously available online since
1983
T h e R o a
d L e s s T r a v e l e
d
Audio recording on a modern Mac: Griffin's amazing
little iMic
June 11, 2003
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, The Post-Standard
I've been making audio recordings on
Windows PCs for years. Imagine my surprise, then, when I
discovered that my new Macintosh had no audio inputs --
none at all.
At first, of course, I was appalled. Why
would Apple sell a modern personal computer without a sound
card or an integrated chip that handled incoming audio
signals?
I never got a satisfactory answer. The
more I learned about my new Mac, the more puzzled I became.
I found out that some modern Macintosh computers have
built-in audio inputs and some don't.
Without a pair of audio inputs, one for
the left stereo channel and one for the right, you
can't record stereo sound on a computer. Before you
assume the worst -- that this means you can't do any
audio recording on your Mac -- let me explain what else I
found out.
It's easy to record stuff on a
modern Mac. All you need is an audio controller that plugs
into one of the computer's USB ports. The one I use is
the iMic from Griffin Technology (www.griffintechnology.com),
which costs $40 normally but was selling for $35 when I
checked the price this week.
The iMic is cute, looking like an
elf-size hockey puck, and it gets all its power from the
computer via the USB connection. It has two connecting
jacks, both for stereo mini plugs. One is a switchable
input connector, with one setting for normal, or
"line," signals and the other for low-level
microphone and phono-cartridge signals. The other is an
output connector so you can pipe the sound to your stereo
system.
(Read last Sunday's Technofile
column for instructions on hooking up your computer to your
stereo receiver. It's on my Web site, at http://technofileonline/texts/tec060803.html.)
The iMic is deceptively simple-looking.
It has only one switch -- a slider that chooses between
microphone (or phono cartridge) input levels and line-level
signals. (The signals from microphones and most phono
cartridges need a big boost to bring them up to normal
volume levels.)
The iMic needs no software on Mac OS X
computers -- the Mac knows how to work with it without any
help -- but I downloaded two extra programs that Griffin
offers free to iMic owners. One is iMic Control, which
provides bass and treble tone controls, an input-level
slider and a few other niceties, and the other is
Griffin's recording software, Final Vinyl.
The "vinyl" in the name
refers, of course, to the 12-inch vinyl records of previous
decades, but Final Vinyl does a good job recording from
other music sources, too. It also has an advanced, 10-band
equalizer and an adjustable phono-cartridge boost that has
built-in RIAA equalization. (That simply means you can hook
up your old turntable's output cables to the iMic
directly, without needing a receiver or preamplifier.)
Griffin's little iMic isn't a
professional audio device, but I found the sound quality
surprisingly clean and free from noise and distortion.
Other iMic users might need to take the same precautions I
did, however; I made sure all the cables connected to the
iMic were routed away from sources of hum such as the backs
of TVs and computer monitors, and I tossed out some old
cables I'd used in the past that weren't shielded
properly.
A brief note on recording software:
You're not limited to Final Vinyl. I tried nearly a
dozen audio recording and editing programs with the iMic.
I'll tell you which ones I liked best next week.
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