M
MCI2424
New member
Today's digital is yesterday's analog. Back in the 60s-70s, a real analog multitrack rig costed 10-20,000$ and home recordists could not afford them at all. Then the porta-studios and narrow format recorders filled the market and home recordists found out they sounded totally different than the pro machines. Decades of noise reduction and every solution they could think of made them sound better, but not in the league of the pro machines.Beck said:No,
The reason many people are even interested in analog is because of disappointment with digital technology. We’ve heard that expressed many times. The fact that so many people have gone back to or stay with analog equipment in a digital world is in and of itself a statement.
There are reasons people choose big lumbering analog machines over the prevailing cheap and easy digital technology. The decision is as much a rejection of digital as it is a vote for analog. You would have us eliminate what is often the first conversation in the process of exploring analog alternatives.
An informed choice between two alternatives involves a rejection at some level of the one not selected.
There is no better place than an analog forum to discuss and even lament with like-minded members about the state of popular music. That conversation is as valid as any other. To go trolling on other forums would be doing what you are doing here… proselytizing.
So, contrary to what you keep insisting, the regular members here aren’t stirring up or starting anything. This is our little analog oasis in a bbs that is primarily DAW driven. As others have tried to tell you in various ways, and even different languages, this is a forum for analog issues, which clearly (to an orderly mind) concerns progress or lack of progress in digital technology -- THE VERY REASON TECHNICALLY ASTUTE PEOPLE ARE STLL USING ANALOG.
Digital is in the exact same boat. The pro systems cost 20-30,000$ and sound fuggin awesome. I have used pro-tools and RADAR systems that can put ANY studer or Otari or MCI to shame as far as quality of sound (if the engineer is really good). The problem, today, is very similar to yesterday's analog situation. I lived through both and engineered through both. To put down digital recording as crap, based on the sound of a $100 soundcard is the same as formulating an opinion of analog recording based on a porta-studio sound. I have talked to kids that are recording into their computer and THEY tell me how analog sucks BECAUSE of their experience with cassette based systems. They don't even register that there are anything other than cassette at all!
It is all perspective and I have said over and over that a great digital rig is totally comparable, and in fact can beat a great analog rig. People here seem to argue but I have used, and still use both and I do know what I am talking about based on experience on many high-end systems. You can't compare $100 soundcard to a pro-tools or RADAR system any more that you can compare a porta-studio to a Studer.
The reason people are returing to analog recording is because the *cheap bad sounding digital systems* sound really bad and the *only affordable* alternative is an old narrow format analog tape machine. I can certainly argue that my MCI 2" 24 track beats the shit out of any home machine out there, but I am faced with the *gear snob* mentality and instantly maligned by the crew here. Then there is the old "If you can't make a hit record on a ___ you can't make one on a studer" defense.
Hit records are not made by Studer, TASCAM of any other machines, but by people who are talanted. Analog recording, as addressed here, is more about equipment and how it performs as well as how to maintain it.
What I AM starting to see are more members here actually getting more pro machines and really understanding, for the first time in their lives, what the big difference is. THAT is how you learn. Understanding the limitations of any equipment and knowing how to get around them is what makes a good engineer. Failing to even listen to people who use better equipment and denying there is nothing wrong with cheap stuff makes you a limited engineer at best. You cannot get better at recording unless you bust your ass with what you can afford now, and upgrade when you know exactly WHY you need something better. Mr Zee is the extreme case of denial and the problem he creates is telling new members how "this sucks, pros suck, all analog recorders are the same. etc" and spreading *opinions* all over the place with no basis in fact at all. I have been using pro machines for so long, it is practically all I know now. The narrow format machines do nothing for me now, but I CAN post facts based on using these machines for many years. I don't know what Mr. Zee has or uses now, but he seems to love his analog machines.Whatever, all I am saying is that using better equipment does not make you a gear snob if you HAVE used cheap stuff and moved up in life. A gear snob is someone who buys expensive stuff because it is the "in" thing to have, like Gucci etc.
Last edited: