A
aarowsmith
New member
Ooh a three year old thread risen from the dead. I'll play
To me the biggest difference when I turn on my analog processors is I can no longer see the audio and I have to really start using my ears (Imagine that for audio). It seems like with DAWs there are an awful lot of threads of "The wave form doesn't look big enough", "how should a spectrograph of my audio look", "what should the peak meter read", "does this look right", "what numbers should I be seeing in the gain reduction field", etc etc etc
While I have to use a computer to record and mix to, I try and do as much as possible mapped to controllers or through analog processing with the screen turned off.
A blank screen takes away all the distraction of "Does this look right" and just like using tape, where a piece of unrecorded tape looks just like a piece of recorded tape, all that matters is "do I like the sound?"
Both digital and analog are both actually an analog of the original sound, in neither case does the actual sound travel through the processors, they just use different mediums and signal types to represent the sound
If I might add to your excellent observations of using digital verses analog audio;
With digital you also have to worry allot about the way you dither down to lower sample rates, such as going from your recorded 24 bit audio down to say 16 bit audio for CD mastering. If you do not do this process correctly it can sound badly muffled. And or if you have say recorded sampled loops in 16 bit and also recorded audio samples at 24 bit, then processing them all in the same way digitally can result in changes to the original audio quality that you may not like to hear. For example a 24 bit master mix not sounding any where close to the CD 16 bit master mix. This does happen allot not only to me and but many of my friends in mastering albums. But both sample rates should sound close right, because on their own it is hard to tell a difference in sound quality between a good 16 bit recording versus a 24 bit one, if done correctly. So then why does the CD master mix sound so different than the same song and same mix played inside the box ??? Mmmmmmm......
With analog audio you don't have to worry about sampling rates and dithering down sample rates to match lower quality sample rates.
With analog audio you don't have to worry about clock's not lining up correctly and timing errors resulting in audible digital jitter, and hence crappy audio.
Although with analog if you use too much EQ processing you can end up with audible frequency harmonic time distortion that causes certain frequencies to resonate and ring. Which may or may not sound bad to the listener. Too much processing of anything can be bad sounding, depending on what you are trying to shoot for.
With analog gear all the audio signals are brought in to the same highest fullest resolution. With analog audio there is no digital loss due to lower resolution digital stair stepping sampling of the original audio wave.
Also may I argue a point here:
In your observation of "Both digital and analog are both actually an analog of the original sound", well that is just not the case with analog audio going into digital. There is a major digital conversion sampling process going on that changes the original analog audio into one's and zero's, this is both a big physical change and an audible change.
However with a analog signal going into analog gear (unless it is being recorded into a analog tape machine) it does not change the original analog signal, it does not physically change it or sample it, unless of course you want it to. For example, changing the original analog audio through some form of analog processing.
That is the huge difference and the point that I am trying to make very clear here, about the differences between your pure analog sgnal going into digital versus it going into analog gear.
To simplify, with digital there is always a drastic sampling conversion change going on, with analog gear there is not such a drastic conversion taking place, and hence the audio stays much true'er to life, if I may put it that way. And no matter how good the software programmer's math is, there is something that gets lost in the digital translation.
I know what most people say about digital audio, it is just a computer doing the math in measuring and recording and sampling the numerous analog audio voltages in analog audio, and then hopefully accurately restoring them back to a analog audio wave again, hopefully sounding the same as when the audio came in. But computers are not always perfect in measuring and in error correction, and at times they also throw away bits of useful information as well.
Whether or not you can actually can hear this taking place and are not be able to tolerate it, is well maybe a mute point........or maybe not ?
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