T
thefanbelow
New member
..with a slight clarification, he only has two inputs on the s/c, so otherwise the same but moving the tape tracks over in pairs.
Also Thefanbelow, you may quickly discover some tracks sound just fine recorded straight into the daw.
So is there anything wrong with using my pre-amp and dumping twice through that instead of having to pick up a 4-channel interface? I don't even have an interface... I had no idea I needed one. Any ones you can recommend?
I've recorded to 4 track & then upped the tracks into a DAW, added some additional ODs and taken advantage of the non destructive editing etc before mixing down to cassette.
It works.
It was easier once I had an interface that could do 4 tracks at once. before then it was much fiddlier but not horribly so.
The advantage of mixing back to tape isn't great in a 4 track cassette machine.
If it were a reel machine with faster speeds or a wider section of tape it'd be more useful.
The "TAPE" sound - saturation etc that is so much loved isn't really achievable on a portastudio.
Yes you can get pretty hot during tracking & that can sound good if done well.
I did a recording taking advantage of that aspect earlier this year.
Oh, don't forget to use the NR & High Speed options with the tape player when recording & playing back.
Just remember the more you shuttled from tape to tape the more likely the quality will "suffer".
On the gear you have the analogue qualities are mainly achieved in tracking.
With your gear mixing to a stereo track & then faux mastering of that stereo track all within the DAW are going to achieve better audio quality than mixing back to cassette tape.
Have a go though.
You may like the result.
Thank you! Will try it out.
Oh...I though someone said 4 inputs.
Well then , he can eventually get a second interface.
Thefanbelow...if you are going to do dump tracks back-n-forth, it helps to have an equal number...makes things easier.
I just realized my pre-amp is not my interface?

This seems to utterly complicate things needlessly in my opinion. He's already stated he wants to record to tape. Why confuse him with another complication like "using the tape player as an effect?" That's certainly not as cut-and-dried as using a plug-in on his DAW. It'll require some creative routing that is not the easiest in the world to explain.
If he's just tracking his vocals and acoustic guitar, it's simple:
Record all 4 tracks on the 424
Since you only have two line inputs on your soundcard, you can't move all 4 tracks simultaneously to your DAW, so move tracks 1 and 2 in one pass and 3 and 4 in another.
Because the 424 will not play back at exactly the same speed each time, there will probably be a second or two of drift between tracks 1-2 and tracks 3-4 throughout the coarse of a 3-4 minute song. So you'll simply need to stretch (make the wav files slightly longer while retaining pitch) or squash (make them slightly shorter while retaining the pitch) the track pairs as necessary to get them to line up. I don't know if Garage Band does this, but if not, I'm sure there are plenty of free time stretch programs that'll do it.
Then you'll have your original 4 tracks aligned in the DAW where you can mix them or add a few additional overdubs if you want first. I guarantee you that's the easiest way to do what you said you want to do. To recap:
1 Record 4 tracks to 424
2 Transfer TKs 1 and 2 to DAW
3 Transfer TKs 3 and 4 to DAW
4 Time stretch as necessary to align those tracks
5 Add additional overdubs to DAW if needed
6 Mix down in DAW
That's it. Enjoy.![]()
Sounds like exactly what I want. Thank you!
That, plus the extra two conversions to get out of the box and back in.
I'm not one to argue that conversions make a massive difference. For example, I don't hear much difference between my Delta and high-end converters, but I do figure that the less you do to your audio the better it will sound.