People tell you all sorts of things on forums. Mostly unsubstantiated bollocks.
I look forward to some properly instituted recordings, tho' how you are going to reconcile the gain staging I am not sure?
Dave.
Well, what you will hear will not be compressed in anyway, you'll hear it
straight out of the pre amp to
Logic. I do not use the saffire pro 40 pre amps, although it doesn't have direct inputs, plugging into them and turning them all the way down doesn't seem to color it at any noticeable level. I mean this is pretty much all I can do.
Another good example, is I can do an A/B with a bass guitar. If you hear that through the MPA II vs the saffire pro 40 pre amp, that is a noticeable difference that about anyone can notice.
I will record both right under clipping.
I've noticed that a few other guys have caught on to the MPA II. Because a lot of art pre amps, suck. And so people assumed this is just a rack mountable one that does the same thing. But it's not. I've noticed on forums that a lot of people who have a lot more expensive gear are digging this thing. They make one now that does not take up any of your inputs. The MPA II with the adat or spdif of in it.
I can also include in the comparison some really cheap pre amps. Which you will notice, don't really seem to do anything but the volume up and down and the coloration can be really bad.
The MPA II is a nice piece though for home
studio guys who can't afford really expensive pre amps. It seems to be the only one under a thousand dollars I can find that I like that much. Most people say for under a thousand dollars the RNP is the best. I also have it, like I said, it just isn't anything impressive like people on the forums say it is. And I'm no
expert or anything but I know enough about it. I mean it's good at what it does but it's not this amazing unit it's made out to be.
I think like I said before the MPA II has so many options on it that it can make one microphone sound a ton of different ways where as that is not something a lot of cheap pre amps have on them. If you turn the plate voltage on the switch on and give it a few minutes, and then record vocals or
acoustic guitar, you can even tell a huge difference in that, and with the switch off.
Go on youtube and type in Art MPA II and you'll see what I mean. For what it is, and for most of us who aren't going to spend 2 grand on a pre amp it's a nice unit. For a noob it's an extremely nice unit and then even for someone who has been doing it for a long time, they find good sounds out of it. That's how I found out about it, a lot of guys who know a lot more stuff than I do about recording. I'm not really a noob to recording but I'm not on
an advanced level. I've been playing music my whole life so my ears are good for it.