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  #1  
Old 06-23-2000
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Question

Ok here's a question. Say you have a pre-recorded drum or guitar track, and you want it to have some sort of a tube "warmness". Can you just run the prerecorded track through the ART tube preamp and get it warmed up? I have some doubts about this since the prerecorded track will already be at line level, and I guess the signal will get messed up when the ART tries to preamplify a line level signal.

Is there any way to do this? Like warming the sound of electronic drums, or prerecorded tracks?

?
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Old 06-23-2000
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ART makes amore expensive model called the DUAL MP that also has line inputs and can be used in the way you describe.If you have a big,good sounding room and are feeling adventurous,run your tracks through some monitors pretty loud(to excite the room)and put some mics up to capture the sound of this interaction.If you have some patience to try different mic placements etc. you can get some BIG sounds that way,too! Cheers!
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Old 06-23-2000
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I remember reading somewhere that Pink Floyd used a similar technique to record two songs from A Momentary Lapse of Reason (A New Machine?) Except the big room was the a big basketball arena...
Just a thought!
-Evan

<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by virtual.ray:
If you have a big,good sounding room and are feeling adventurous,run your tracks through some monitors pretty loud(to excite the room)and put some mics up to capture the sound of this interaction.If you have some patience to try different mic placements etc. you can get some BIG sounds that way,too! Cheers!<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

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Old 06-23-2000
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Lightbulb

Memo - I seem to remember Sonusman (resident engineer) saying he not only used the ARTs for tracking, but when he was mixing down as well. If he can do it, it can be done, but you'll have to adjust the levels.
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Old 06-23-2000
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Yes, the ART MP can be used with both mic and line levels, according to ART. Be sure you pad the incoming level and most importantly, make sure you don't clip the signal. A big misconception that people have about the unit is that they can push the levels and overdrive the tube, but in fact, the tube only adds "tube coloring" - most of the signal processing is solid state. A few months ago there was a topic on another BBS (guess which one) and one guy actually discovered his unit would work without the tube. Go figure.
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Old 06-23-2000
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So if I just connect the 1/4 outs from my Delta 44 and into the ART, it should work? How should the levels be on the ART?
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Old 06-23-2000
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Actually I think Ed runs his mix through an Art Tube LeVeLaR. Not an MP.

I've tried this and I've found that the MP dosen't really add a lot of "warmth" to the signal. Actually what I've ended up doing instead is running things through my Mesa Boogie DC-3- now were talking warm.....


Also I've put the Art in between my reverb and the effects return, it did add a little darker quality to the verb which is what I was going for.

-jhe
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Old 06-24-2000
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sonusman, you are correct. I read the MP manual and it states: "The clip LED is positioned at the tube's output circuitry and lights when a level 6dB below hard clipping dB is reached." (notice it doesn't say what color)

I notice that when I push the input, it first lights amber, then red, so I am guessing that the amber is the 6dB threshold and red is 0db (hard clipping)? Does this seem reasonable?

Anyway, I try not to allow clipping in any solid state device where I am trying to record a "clean/pure" signal (easier said than done!) Of course clipping has it's place when used for effect.

p.s. I'm downloading an mp3. Man, you've got a great looking (and probably great sounding) mobile studio!



[This message has been edited by CurtG (edited 06-24-2000).]
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Old 06-25-2000
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Lightbulb

Ed: "I don't think that even then that the nominal hiss produced by the unit is a bad trade off for the color and transient control
the unit provides."

I like the color of the ART as well, but I'm not sure what you mean by 'transient control'. 'Transient control' = 'short signals don't clip'? See, I'm using a compressor when I track, so if the ART supplies mild compression of the signal preventing clipping of transient, that's nice, but how important is it?

[This message has been edited by dobro (edited 06-25-2000).]
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Old 07-05-2000
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Ed,

Have you checked out the Bellari Rp220 mic pre? About $350 for stereo, and I'll take it over the ART any day. It seems like you can push it a lot harder than the ART before it starts clipping.....
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