T
tdukex
Man of the Muse
Ed, when you say Pro MP do you mean Pro MPA, the dual mic pre? If so, how does your 797 Audio CR998 sound through it?
geekgurl said:"clean yet fat and buttery" ... it has character, but it's not muddy in any way.
Dot said:One thing I never see people discuss on these boards is how much "space" in the soundfield a preamp takes up in order to have your ear accurately define a particular instrument or voice. People wonder how you can hear every instrument clearly on a well-recorded song – even if it's through a shitty little speaker. Well, a lot of the secret is in the mic pres.
Take the stereo field and within it place a sound – let's say an acoustic guitar. Now, how much space is that taking up? Well, if it's an inexpensive preamp, it might "sound good" just on that one track, but we have to add a lot more tracks in there to make a complete stereo mix of a song.
Let's make our stereo field the size of a dollar. Now, that guitar through a cheap pre might take up the size of a quarter. So, how may quarters could you lay on a dollar before you started running out of room? Not even 18. Try it yourself.
On that same dollar, how many heads from a straightpin could you fit? My guess is a couple of hundred.
When you listen to an individual acoustic guitar track that's well-miked running through a really high-quality preamp – the sound of the guitar will take up about as much space as the head on a pin.
I'm currently testing quite a few of the mic pres available – we've got John Hardy M1, Great River MP-1NV, Vintech 1272, Grace 101, Speck MicPre 5.O, Dan Alexander Dual Class A, Brent Averill 1272 and API and we've got Buzz Audio, Summit and more on the way.
The one thing all these pres have in common is that they focus the origin of a given sound in a very small and tightly-focused space within the soundstage.
Now, if you take a "decent" pre like an HHB or the M-Audio, ART or a Presonus and compare them to some of the pro pres listed above – what you'll hear is that the "lesser" pres almost sound like they're swimming with a chorus effect. They are considerably less defined than their pro counterparts. And this starts to add up as you add tracks into the mix. All those parts take up so much space and by the time you're ready to mix you wonder why – with all you try w/ EQ and rolling this off and moving that over – you can't get a clear mix that sounds like it was professionally recorded.
On the other hand, with well-recorded tracks with good pres, you can basically throw up the faders and the song is 95% there.
Then comes something that – to me – is even more important than EQ for instruments sitting in the right place in the mix – and that's panning.And it's a lot easier to pan a specific sound if you can easily pin-point in the stereo field just exactly where that sound is positioned. A great pre will show you, whereas a less-than-stellar pre will confuse your ears because the sound is literally taking up a less-defined area.
This is one of the reasons people need to invest in the front-end and not worry about having the DAW du jour. Almost any DAW made in the last five years will sound like any other DAW. There is very little difference – if at all – between the sonic performance of something like a Roland 880 and a full-blown Pro Tools rig.
Investing in the front-end is investing. Spending money on computer-based audio is the disposable trash of our age right now. There are $100,000 Sony digital multi-tracks made just a few years ago that are literally worth next to nothing now.
People think nothing of spending $5K - $10K on some new DAW-in-a-box. Two years from now it won't be worth $1K.
BUT...
If you buy any of those pro pres I listed, they will still be worth nearly as much as you payed for them in five or ten years – and some of them will actually appreciate in value.
Expensive $1000 mic pres are not expensive. It's a fact.
Sample rates are switching and rising a mile a minute. 96K today and 192 tomorrow. It's all meant to be disposable.
Hang on to your recording medium – whatever you use. Jumping to the next great DAW will not improve your sound nearly as much as a serious front-end. Not even close.
[ rant over ] : )
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Dan Richards
Digital Pro Sound
sonusman said:Actually, all but one of those has classA's all over on it. Which one is ALL "cheap" pre's?
Ed