Why would I use the ART over a Focusrite and Drawmer? On some things, it just plain outright sound much better! The Focusrite to my ears only sounds good on a few things. The Drawmer I have been tending to use it's tube compression more than anything. The preamp is okay, but seems to lack a certain something over the ART. I would take the ART over the Drawmer pre in 99 out of 100 applications. The ART vs. Focusrite would be ART 60 out of 100 applications.
I need to get a place to put my whole slew of mp3's back up to. I used to have about 15 mp3's posted on my old website of a cross section of genre's. Most of it used the ART as the main preamp. Spinkled in was a variety of other stuff, Focusrite, Demeter, TL Audio Classic, API, Neve, Peavey VMP 2 (YES!!! Peavery actually DID make a great sounding preamp once upon a time....

), Mackie HHB, etc..... Hey, on some of this stuff, it wasn't just me that was favoring the ART. The producer that I worked with on The Heavy Brothers CD (if you have been around for a while, you heard of this stuff I posted in the clinic.....) was used to working with mostly class A gear. When we tracked the HB CD, we ALWAYS tried the "better" pre's first. Who wouldn't. In the end though, we found ourselves going back time and time again to the ART because there was something magical happening in the sound with them. We were getting great record levels on TypeI ADAT's that we couldn't even get close to with some of the fixed gain stage pre's, like the Focusrite, and the top end on these was so nice and extended! Adjustments to the input to output on the unit allowed us to achieve a variety of colors, not just a one trick pony sound like many other pre's.
Well, call me crazy here! But for those of you that haven't heard what I record and mix, I suspect that you are going to be very surprised. You will not be the first. I have had gear snobs envy some of this stuff. Sound like I am patting myself on the back here? Well, maybe, but when people who's work I respect give out these compliments it may be natural to feel validated in my selections of gear.
This is going to be a bold statement to make, but I have made it before, and will probably make it again. Few on these boards have enough experience, good enough gear, or any much examples of a variety of work for all to hear to be throwing around much advice. Should one heed my advice over anothers? Depends. You want results like mine?

But that is not the end of the story. Once you have enough time behind the console (yes, REAL consoles and not some poorly written software code wannabe mixer....) and monitors (not stuff with 5" woofers!!! or home stereo speakers....) and have to deal with clients who tend to create sonic messes for you to deal with, you start hearing things a bit differently. When you are paid to do this, you start dropping pre-concieved ideas of what stuff should sound like and start dealing with what is there. Once you start dealing with what is there, and not relying upon electronics to alter it in ways that it really can't be altered too, you start realizing that a few pieces of gear tend to work better than others. Maybe this gear reflects the way you like to do things, but I don't think so.
I have been handing out advice on this BBS, with examples of my work to back it, for almost two years now. There are many local studios in Portland that buy gear based upon my recommendations because they have heard my work with it and are impressed. After a short time of working with that gear, THEY TOO start appreciating what this gear can do! They come back asking advice again in the future because I steer them in good directions.
If you all want to believe me recommending a few choice pieces of gear time and time again is not good advice compared to other "sound good de jure" stuff that the herds buy, I cannot stop you. Some of you will never be convinced. Some of you will try it out and be VERY happy that you did. Others of you will try it out, think it sucks, buy something 10X the price and think IT sucks too! All in all, my advice is just that. My reviews of gear is like an asshole! We all have them.
I continually hear people achieving great results with a few pieces of gear that don't cost all that much. Event 20/20 monitors, ART Tube MP's, SM-57, AT-4033, Allen and Heath mixers (for 'budget' consoles) and Soundcraft for higher end consoles.
Before anyone starts trying to knock my preference of an ART over a Meek, please post a lot of different stuff that you use the Meek on for me to hear. I take your results quite seriously. I take your words with a grain of salt.
Ed
Ed