Those that dont fully understand digital sampling and harmonics shouldn't really even comment on a thread like this. Analog recording does capture more harmonics and produce its own distortion. Digital at 24/96 does a better job at capturing the full order of harmonics but still leaves out some...
Doesn't the whole room treatment thing come into play when you are listening at a volume where the room's natural reverberation takes over? Is'nt mixing 101 tell you that your head placement in the "near field" sweetspot is parmount to mixiing? It's nice to turn up the monitors and jam your mix...
Tip I learned from an well known sound engineer, Go to your other tracks and notch out the unused frequencies that are interfearing with the vocal tones and their harmonic order. You need the upper and lower harmonics to be present to have a good sounding dry vocal sound.
I'd give it a shot. Mix sounds clean. Bass seemed a little low and a little freq.battle going on between guitars and vocals. Thats listening through phones. Take it for what it's worth. Nice performance either way. Nice job.
Which is typically the culprit for static background noise? PCI cards or CPU fans? My card is an Arc88 card and the CPU is a Pentium dual core processor. The card is older than the computer. Recordings have been very accurate. Thinking maybe to move to an M-Audio 24/96 card for the remainder of...
Just curious, Does anybody know why doesn't SOny music studio 8 doesn't allow input monitoring while recording? ie; hearing what you play while recording? The freeware program Audacity lets you do that but not Sony. IS this the "catch" for not buying Acid 7?