K
Kasey
New member
"I prefer the real cure. Try analog tape! Invest in a great analog recorder. Your first step is to get a good two-track 1/2" machine. After that, consider using wide-track analog multitrack for the main tracks. To get good analog sound that's better than the most expensive digital, practice your alignment techniques, don't bounce tracks, use wider track widths and higher speeds than you did before. In 2005 it's still cheaper than going state-of-the-art digital with 24 tracks of 96 Khz/24-bit digital audio and 48 outboard world-class converters. Maybe by 2010 the price-performance points will match, if world-class converter prices come down."
so this is a quote from this website: http://www.digido.com/portal/pmodule_id=11/pmdmode=fullscreen/pageadder_page_id=37/
Its some article from a mastering engineer and he's talking about analog versus digital, obviously. I've been considering going analog (i'm using an ADAT XT20 right now....yea i know, but it was cheap, and i hate using computers for recording).
My thoughts were to get a reel to reel 8 track, then master down to digital. But he's saying the opposite - get a 2 track reel to reel for mastering, and then the next thing to get is 8 track....why? he doesnt explain.
so this is a quote from this website: http://www.digido.com/portal/pmodule_id=11/pmdmode=fullscreen/pageadder_page_id=37/
Its some article from a mastering engineer and he's talking about analog versus digital, obviously. I've been considering going analog (i'm using an ADAT XT20 right now....yea i know, but it was cheap, and i hate using computers for recording).
My thoughts were to get a reel to reel 8 track, then master down to digital. But he's saying the opposite - get a 2 track reel to reel for mastering, and then the next thing to get is 8 track....why? he doesnt explain.