G
Greg_L
Banned
maybe I'm just full of shit and over-think things. I can't remember.
No, you were absolutely 100% right, you just took too many fucking words to say it because you like to hear yourself talk.
maybe I'm just full of shit and over-think things. I can't remember.
No, you were absolutely 100% right, you just took too many fucking words to say it because you like to hear yourself talk.
Thanks. Internet high fives from strangers make it all worthwhile.
It's not that I like hearing myself talk, it's that I dislike looking back at things I've said and hating them, or regret not saying this/that and the other thing. Seeing old things I've said where I want to smack myself for whatever reason. The voice in my head is a wordy jackass who strives for brevity, but rarely is able to think in fewer than 10 word sentences. Once I get started on a topic that interests me my mind's turbo spools. When trying to be brief I wind up coming off as a bigger creep or giving the wrong impression altogether. Needless to say I don't tweet. Maybe some day...
Also, look who's (liking to hear himself) talking, post count!![]()
I don't think I'll ever understand why some people have such strong feelings on the subject of analog vs. digital. It just doesn't seem like something to get excited about.
We've all heard plenty of great and shitty music produced using both mediums, so I don't see why it makes a bit of difference either way.
![]()
OK. If that's your opinion...but with all due respect, the fact is digital recording isn't *more accurate* to the original source than tape. It creates its own, new set of problems, distortion and color. Both forms of technology in all their glory, are imperfect. Maybe live tracking/ears in the room is like looking through an open window, compared to digital/analog recordings which are like looking through that same window, but with tinted glass one time and an insect screen another.
To piggyback off the template you've provided:
*Many people seem to be blind to all the distortions that digital recording has - but if these distortions give you the sound you want, then go ahead and use it - I have no problem with that.*
I only take issue with the perpetuation of fallacy born from marketing departments.
I used the word "Migration" and not "Drive" by design. While the push for digital technology may have been promoted by the typical marketing pitches and promises w/r/t audio fidelity...the migration didn't happen in the 70s. How many "digital studios" were there at that time? The peak of magnetic tape recording only came about in the mid-late 80s, when engineers finally began to understand how to maximize the potential of 2" tape. By then it was already in its twilight years...and being saturated with massive gated-reverb snares and chorus on EVERYTHING. (Yuck!)
When do you think the migration to digital studios gained traction and setups/recordings went pop and actually became ubiquitous?
It is my contention the migration to tapeless digital recording gained its traction in the early-mid 90s, in large part because of the non-destructive editing+cost of resources...and because most people associate "the sound of magnetic tape" as a misnomer, with cassette tape hiss. By then 16bit samplers with enough memory to store entire albums were on the market, along with popular Atari ST setups and even stand alone digital multitrack recorders like the Roland DM800. These could all be had for well under $10k, which by contrast to a pro tape machine, seemed like a bargain.
As it turns out I'm a hybrid-technology fella who appreciates what A/D both have to offer...and my fondness for digital ITB solutions only increase exponentially when it comes time to rearrange tangible gear.
If you believe that, then just change your digital sampling rate to 88 or 96 or 192 kHz and the available frequencies can go up.
However, before I do that, I'd have to find a microphone and speakers and headphones that can accurately reproduce about the 20kHz figure...
The thing that bugs me is that all these Russ Andrews disciples that hear all these airy fairy things SHOULD be driven mad by the ultrasonic shit that invades our world!
Dave.
Three days on and still no review of Ian Anderson in Sydney.
Must have been a very good--or very bad--concert. My money is on very good!
Except when said process interferes with art which in the case of tape and vinyl and the Moonlight Sonata it most assuredly does.I think that relative to art, results are always more important than process.
i just finished a day of analog recording. I had a blast! After some drum tracking I got to play with a new (analog) compressor on the drum buss. Delicious!