T
the_man
New member
Why?
Reading "The Rack" forum and other recording websites and magazines, there's a lot of emphasis on all the different types of mic preamps pro studios have. I guess the point is that you need many different kinds of preamps to get all kinds of different sounds and to accomodate all kinds of different singers and instruments.
So why do consoles have mic preamps? I would imagine most people would use their "specialized" pres and use the EQ and compression facilities of the console strips, but then one could just get specialized EQ and compression also. Why is it useful to have a console during tracking?
Would it be more expensive to piece together 24 channels or so out of assorted outboard gear? Its not like recoding consoles are cheap.
I guess if you're recording onto analog tape or just unhappy with the mixer in your DAW, it'd be helpful to have one for mixing, but then you're spending a lot for pre's, eq's and the like that you're not using.
Just wondering.
Reading "The Rack" forum and other recording websites and magazines, there's a lot of emphasis on all the different types of mic preamps pro studios have. I guess the point is that you need many different kinds of preamps to get all kinds of different sounds and to accomodate all kinds of different singers and instruments.
So why do consoles have mic preamps? I would imagine most people would use their "specialized" pres and use the EQ and compression facilities of the console strips, but then one could just get specialized EQ and compression also. Why is it useful to have a console during tracking?
Would it be more expensive to piece together 24 channels or so out of assorted outboard gear? Its not like recoding consoles are cheap.
I guess if you're recording onto analog tape or just unhappy with the mixer in your DAW, it'd be helpful to have one for mixing, but then you're spending a lot for pre's, eq's and the like that you're not using.
Just wondering.