M
Moon Unit Sound
New member
I got a chance to listen to a CD recently that compared a lot of the different mic pres, and I have to be honest: I was pretty surprized by the results. The CD basically goes through a bunch of different sound samples from various instruments through all of the preamps, one by one. I listened to all the samples blind, and put smiley faces next to the ones I liked, straight-faces next to the average ones and so on.
Here are just a few random thoughts:
Focusrite Red - Disappointment. I was fully expecting this one to be one of my favorites, but as it turns out, too many straight faces, a few smileys, and a few frowns. Nothing special.
Presonus - Another disappointment. Not bad, but nothing special here either. One too many frown faces.
Grace Design - Undecided. I liked this one on all of the "weird instruments" and percusssion that were tested. I also gave it the highest marks, hands down, on things like woodwind and brass instruments. As far as drums, guitar, and other more traditional pop instruments, it was just okay. Conclusion: probably great for classical, folk, or jazz, but a little too vanilla for pop/rock and definitely too plain-jane for metal or punk.
The surprize of the bunch: DBX. I don't recall which model it was, but I remember it was one of their Silver series. Surprizingly clean sounding, contrary to what I have heard from other users. I found this one to be more of a jack-of-all. A few smiley faces, a lot of plain faces, but I don't recall any frowns. It just sounds "pretty good" on just about everything.
Here are just a few random thoughts:
Focusrite Red - Disappointment. I was fully expecting this one to be one of my favorites, but as it turns out, too many straight faces, a few smileys, and a few frowns. Nothing special.
Presonus - Another disappointment. Not bad, but nothing special here either. One too many frown faces.
Grace Design - Undecided. I liked this one on all of the "weird instruments" and percusssion that were tested. I also gave it the highest marks, hands down, on things like woodwind and brass instruments. As far as drums, guitar, and other more traditional pop instruments, it was just okay. Conclusion: probably great for classical, folk, or jazz, but a little too vanilla for pop/rock and definitely too plain-jane for metal or punk.
The surprize of the bunch: DBX. I don't recall which model it was, but I remember it was one of their Silver series. Surprizingly clean sounding, contrary to what I have heard from other users. I found this one to be more of a jack-of-all. A few smiley faces, a lot of plain faces, but I don't recall any frowns. It just sounds "pretty good" on just about everything.