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For about a year ago I decided to buy me a dedicated audio PC. I did a good deal of research on diffrent forums but mainly the northen sound source forum, since I'm a user of GigaStudio. I came up with an ASUS mobo, matrox videocard, three maxtor harddisks, one for win and progs, one for audio and one for gigs. I installed win 98 SE and did all nessesary optimations, and since I was new to the concept of building a PC from scratch, I was mighty proud when it first started up and ran like a clock.
The whole idea with a studio based around a computer was to me the "Best Bang For The Buck", and since the number of tracks was depending on the PC's hardware, I figured out that I proboubly could handle over 40 tracks in 16-44, more than I'll ever use. That compared to the Yamaha 4 track cassette porta I've borwed form a friend in the past was to me a big releife. No more 4 track limitations.
Previusly I've used the family computer, the whole idea of recording to computer was acctuly my fathers(when we got the new PIII dell computer to our home), and it was also he who bought the WaMIrack 24 I'm now using.
I accualy recorded a demo of two songs on the dell computer with a quality I could never dream of. This was allmost three years ago, and I'm now getting better on the recording art, as well as a total gear-slut.
To go back even more in time to the days of junior high and the age of 15-16, I was recording my first demo with my band. This was at my school, and they where equipt mith a 24 channel Spirit desk and a Fostex B16, and some other stuff. It's kind of odd that a junior highschool is equipt with this, and you should see the rooms they had, real proffesional buildt with controll room and severall session rooms.
However, this was a free recording we where able to do and there was a guy helping us out as a audio enginere. We recorded about three demos there under a three year period and for the later two the singer in the band have learned to master the gear by himself.
Though my own interest in recording where not that big at the time, I've allways heard arguments about the analog sounded better than the digital, or should I say fatter.
Whatever, about a half year ago I spotted a add on a Tascam 38, a reel to reel deck with 8 tracks on a half inch reel. I bought it and have been trying out some drumrecording with it,,,,,,,,,,,
and finally to my point, I did not only discovered the nice oppertunity of warmth and tape saturation, I did also discover that it was a much more creative way of working. There was absolute somthing about acctualy press play and rec insted of ridin the mouse around the screen, and to skip the oppertunity to view the audio graffic on screen.
This get me wondering if I might experience somthing similare if I whould have used a digital recorder such as the Mackie SDR 24/96. The better thing about such digital recorder is that it's relative portable if I want to record in a diffrent enviornent.
It seems that from now on I'm getting more hardware than software as a more correct gear-slut would do, the only problem is the money.
But now at 21, I'm heading for SAE in march, and this will definetly give me the oppertunity to drewl over expensive gear while I'm learning them.
But what is your experience about this matter, do you get more creative vibes when useing "non PC/screen related" recording techniques.
The whole idea with a studio based around a computer was to me the "Best Bang For The Buck", and since the number of tracks was depending on the PC's hardware, I figured out that I proboubly could handle over 40 tracks in 16-44, more than I'll ever use. That compared to the Yamaha 4 track cassette porta I've borwed form a friend in the past was to me a big releife. No more 4 track limitations.
Previusly I've used the family computer, the whole idea of recording to computer was acctuly my fathers(when we got the new PIII dell computer to our home), and it was also he who bought the WaMIrack 24 I'm now using.
I accualy recorded a demo of two songs on the dell computer with a quality I could never dream of. This was allmost three years ago, and I'm now getting better on the recording art, as well as a total gear-slut.
To go back even more in time to the days of junior high and the age of 15-16, I was recording my first demo with my band. This was at my school, and they where equipt mith a 24 channel Spirit desk and a Fostex B16, and some other stuff. It's kind of odd that a junior highschool is equipt with this, and you should see the rooms they had, real proffesional buildt with controll room and severall session rooms.
However, this was a free recording we where able to do and there was a guy helping us out as a audio enginere. We recorded about three demos there under a three year period and for the later two the singer in the band have learned to master the gear by himself.
Though my own interest in recording where not that big at the time, I've allways heard arguments about the analog sounded better than the digital, or should I say fatter.
Whatever, about a half year ago I spotted a add on a Tascam 38, a reel to reel deck with 8 tracks on a half inch reel. I bought it and have been trying out some drumrecording with it,,,,,,,,,,,
and finally to my point, I did not only discovered the nice oppertunity of warmth and tape saturation, I did also discover that it was a much more creative way of working. There was absolute somthing about acctualy press play and rec insted of ridin the mouse around the screen, and to skip the oppertunity to view the audio graffic on screen.
This get me wondering if I might experience somthing similare if I whould have used a digital recorder such as the Mackie SDR 24/96. The better thing about such digital recorder is that it's relative portable if I want to record in a diffrent enviornent.
It seems that from now on I'm getting more hardware than software as a more correct gear-slut would do, the only problem is the money.
But now at 21, I'm heading for SAE in march, and this will definetly give me the oppertunity to drewl over expensive gear while I'm learning them.
But what is your experience about this matter, do you get more creative vibes when useing "non PC/screen related" recording techniques.