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Icon QCon Pro control surface – Control surface with motorized faders€340.00 €289.00
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Have you ever thought: “If only I had recorded that rehearsal, that idea wouldn’t be gone”? Or shot a great video… with **terrible phone audio**? That’s exactl...
Have you ever thought: “If only I had recorded that rehearsal, that idea wouldn’t be gone”? Or shot a great video… with terrible phone audio?
That’s exactly where portable recorders and field recorders come in: they give you proper audio, anywhere, without carrying a full studio around.
In this guide we’ll look at:
To compare real‑world products you can start here:
These are typically:
They’re ideal for:
This is where things get more serious:
They’re built for:
Putting a recorder in the right place is already far better than a phone thrown in the room.
Tips:
Icon
Icon QCon Pro control surface – Control surface with motorized faders€340.00 €289.00
discount of 15%
Sold in:
Italy
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For songwriters, guitarists and producers:
A small portable recorder becomes your audio notebook.
This lets you create live sessions and content for socials without bringing a laptop.
Camera or phone audio is often the bottleneck.
A portable recorder lets you:
A field recorder with 2–4 XLR inputs is perfect for:
You can use dynamic mics for voice, control levels and save everything to SD.
For video and sound‑focused work:
If you mostly record rehearsals and ambience, good built‑in mics are enough. If you need more control, make sure you can plug in external microphones.
Higher‑end field recorders usually offer cleaner, quieter preamps.
Ask yourself:
One extra input is often the difference between "we managed" and "we’re short" on a gig.
Priorities:
A compact 2‑channel portable recorder is often enough.
In some situations, yes – but a dedicated recorder usually gives you:
Only if you record multiple separate sources. For rehearsals, ideas and vlogs, a good 2‑channel recorder is enough. For drums, ensembles and complex video sets, extra channels are extremely useful.
It’s very convenient because it makes clipping much harder, but for most musicians a solid 24‑bit recorder with proper gain staging is more than adequate.
Many models can. Look for USB audio interface in the specs: it can double as your studio interface when you’re not in the field.
No, but they can dramatically improve your sound (lavs for voice, shotguns for video, dynamics for spoken word). Built‑ins are fine for ambience and rehearsals but not always ideal for close‑up voice.
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