Sometimes we just need to rant… and as rants go, yours wasn’t bad. However, when all the smoke clears the recording medium is just as important as any other factor in music… talent, knowledge, experience, mics, pres, acoustics, monitors, quality instruments, etc.
Often, pointing to other aspects of recording is just a diversion from having to examine the pros and cons of the medium. But ultimately we have to examine it, or be remiss in our pursuit of recording excellence.
The recording medium still stands or falls on its own merits. Choosing one’s recording medium with care is no different than any other aspect... and a poor medium can ruin an otherwise good effort.
I was an early digital advocate. My informed choice of using analog now over any digital medium, past and present, is not about nostalgia. If that were a motivation I’d be using an Alesis ADAT from 1991. Now those were exciting times. Even though the promise of digital didn’t pan out it was fun while I still believed we were at the forefront of a new age in recording… ah, the memories.
Most of my peers continued on the digital crazy train and are still having the same conversations about next year’s technology fixing the current shortcomings.
But in digital its as simple as setting up a track or project template that gives me instantly the things i want to hear and that i reach for often. THINGS I REACH FOR OFTEN CREATIVELY. That means i can work how i want. Thats what everyone wants in the world of art. To be themselves and be creative and stand for something unique and not just garden variety and bland. "Control" provides this for you .
The grand illusion! Yes there are labels and settings that give you the feeling you have greater control… but there are algorithms and processes working beneath the apparent that are only emulations and approximations of what you think you are accomplishing or would be accomplishing with analog. What you’ve got isn’t what you think you’ve got. For example, digitally recording (sampling) a synth and converting it up an octive is not the same as playing that synth voice an octive higher from the keyboard, or via MIDI.
At 27 you and millions of others, some a little older, completely missed the pre-digital age of MIDI and synchronization. And although it’s often so intertwined with features on the typical DAW, MIDI has nothing to do with digital recording. MIDI stands on its own and can be implemented with any recording technology or none at all.
Open a music magazine from, say 1988 and the subject wasn’t analog vs. digital, but real tracks (analog) vs. virtual tracks (MIDI). With MIDI you can do everything you describe with your Casio without committing tracks to analog or digital until the mastering stage. It doesn’t get any better than that.
Easy manipulation isn’t a good reason for going completely digital. As I stated, you can accomplish your above experimentation with MIDI, or even use digital hocus pocus as an effect while reserving critical things like vocals, drums, electric/acoustic guitar and mastering for analog.
And back to those “How to fix digital” conversations I used to have with my peers… the content of those conversations hasn’t changed much since 1989 (converters and resolution ad nauseum) except that they’ve added a topic or two, like, “What happened to the music recording industry, like in where did it go?” and, “Why does everything sound like crap?”
It reminds me of an alarming study a few years ago that revealed a large number of inner city youth didn’t know sex causes pregnancy.
Musically speaking, many otherwise bright musicians and recordists are just as naive and unsophisticated.
