
leddy
Well-known member
Without this forum, I don't think I could have pulled together the information to start spending money on tape gear. Thanks.
I just won an auction for a Tascam 22-2. I'm not a total noob to tape, but my experience is limited to cassette 4-tracks (my first was a Fostex X-15 purchased over 20 years ago) and the handful of times I recorded (as a musician, not an engineer) in good studios.
What put me over the edge was listening to a 15-year-old recording with a band I did in college at a studio that was recorded on a modest 1" 16-track format. It was mixed quickly and never mastered. It is utterly gorgeous. Even some of the cassette projects I did - while not as hi-fi as my digital recordings, they are easier to listen to in many ways.
I record live jazz, and unless I can get my hands on a little Nagra or something, I think I'll still use my digital gear for tracking, then mix to tape at home. At least I'm getting out of the box. It's a start.
So thanks again - I look forward to getting more involved here as I learn.

I just won an auction for a Tascam 22-2. I'm not a total noob to tape, but my experience is limited to cassette 4-tracks (my first was a Fostex X-15 purchased over 20 years ago) and the handful of times I recorded (as a musician, not an engineer) in good studios.
What put me over the edge was listening to a 15-year-old recording with a band I did in college at a studio that was recorded on a modest 1" 16-track format. It was mixed quickly and never mastered. It is utterly gorgeous. Even some of the cassette projects I did - while not as hi-fi as my digital recordings, they are easier to listen to in many ways.
I record live jazz, and unless I can get my hands on a little Nagra or something, I think I'll still use my digital gear for tracking, then mix to tape at home. At least I'm getting out of the box. It's a start.
So thanks again - I look forward to getting more involved here as I learn.
