
Chris Shaeffer
Peavey ROCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I still feel a bit like a kid who got away with stealing a whole box of candy bars at the corner store and I've found a quiet place to chow down on 'em. I might have a stomach ache later, but for now I'm in recording geek heaven.
So I brought home my "good" mixer from the studio- a Soundtracs Solo MIDI 16x8- and scored a couple DX-4d's off ebay. Local, too, so I picked them up right away. Last night I headed home from work "early" (as in before 10pm) and spent the whole night enjoyably wiring it up and testing it out. I got my trial and error stuff out of the way last week and this time I wanted to do something real.
I picked a newer song that I hadn't really done a good recording of and that I'm proposing for a colaboration with a friend in Hawaii. I posted it at my site with lyrics and production notes for him. I think I finally hit the hay at 3am.
And this candy-bar-eating-and-grininng-from-ear-to-ear kid can't help but post a link here for you folks. Not sure why, really- I'm just happy and want to share my candy.
http://www.chrisshaeffer.com/drafts/analost.html
(Edit: rats- the upload didn't work. Curse my old, slow phone line! I'll try again.)
So my general feeling is:
1) D@mn, but this is so much more satisfying than Pro Tools. I appreciate that PT gives me 32 tracks and a boat-load of cool functionality.... but... I don't need to explain it to you in this forum, do I?
2) The dbx kicks butt- I had no idea how much it would clean up. It also eliminates the crosstalk I was noticing before I hooked it up. Way better than the Type II dbx on the old 4-track. Almost as clean as and more forgiving than Pro Tools. Setting levels is easier with it, too- more like I remember from when I started.
3) I think my mbox is going to be gathering quite a bit more dust than I thought. The 48 is now officially my home recording box. After working with computers all day its nice to NOT use one for my favorite hobby.
4) Thinking about picking of a local 80-8 cheap to have a beatup machine for learning calibration and alignment. Or maybe a 388... Or saving up for a 16 track... Am I addicted?... Should I be posting this in the SAS forum?
And for a nice ironic twist- the entire project was recorded while my data recovery software cranked away at finding all the data on my primary studio drive: it lost its identitly a little while ago.
OK. Back to munching my candy.
take care,
Chris
So I brought home my "good" mixer from the studio- a Soundtracs Solo MIDI 16x8- and scored a couple DX-4d's off ebay. Local, too, so I picked them up right away. Last night I headed home from work "early" (as in before 10pm) and spent the whole night enjoyably wiring it up and testing it out. I got my trial and error stuff out of the way last week and this time I wanted to do something real.
I picked a newer song that I hadn't really done a good recording of and that I'm proposing for a colaboration with a friend in Hawaii. I posted it at my site with lyrics and production notes for him. I think I finally hit the hay at 3am.
And this candy-bar-eating-and-grininng-from-ear-to-ear kid can't help but post a link here for you folks. Not sure why, really- I'm just happy and want to share my candy.
http://www.chrisshaeffer.com/drafts/analost.html
(Edit: rats- the upload didn't work. Curse my old, slow phone line! I'll try again.)
So my general feeling is:
1) D@mn, but this is so much more satisfying than Pro Tools. I appreciate that PT gives me 32 tracks and a boat-load of cool functionality.... but... I don't need to explain it to you in this forum, do I?

2) The dbx kicks butt- I had no idea how much it would clean up. It also eliminates the crosstalk I was noticing before I hooked it up. Way better than the Type II dbx on the old 4-track. Almost as clean as and more forgiving than Pro Tools. Setting levels is easier with it, too- more like I remember from when I started.
3) I think my mbox is going to be gathering quite a bit more dust than I thought. The 48 is now officially my home recording box. After working with computers all day its nice to NOT use one for my favorite hobby.
4) Thinking about picking of a local 80-8 cheap to have a beatup machine for learning calibration and alignment. Or maybe a 388... Or saving up for a 16 track... Am I addicted?... Should I be posting this in the SAS forum?

And for a nice ironic twist- the entire project was recorded while my data recovery software cranked away at finding all the data on my primary studio drive: it lost its identitly a little while ago.
OK. Back to munching my candy.

take care,
Chris