Z
Zobi
New member
I'm trying to decide on what my recording set-up should be. I've been doing a bunch of research and I feel like I'm not getting anywhere close to a solution. I know that a computer set-up is pretty much what most people choose these days.
I'm into old-school hip hop and I know that most of my favorite albums were recorded on analog tape. From what I've gathered, it's only the high end professional 2" tape recorders that would give me "that warm analog sound". Apparently, anything less will give me a lot of noise, hiss, etc. Would you guys agree? Regarding a computer DAW, I see a lot of people complain about the "digital sound". Is it true that once I have my audio recorded in a computer, every time I touch it (move it, add gain, put an effect on it, etc...), the software has to re-draw all those 1s and 0s and do it really fast. So fast that sometimes it loses some of the 1's and 0's so it dithers it? Meaning I am losing a little bit of the signal each time.... Could this contribute to the "thin digital" sound? I know that the AD/DA converters are very important, but still......
I also read about combining digital and analog together. Recording everything into a software program, mix in software and then record the final master onto a tape or recording onto a tape and then dumping it into a software for mixing. Do you guys have experience with this kind of set-up? Would you recommend it?
My current set-up consists of hardware samplers/sequencers and Tascam M-320 mixer. That's all I have.
Any help and tips would be greatly appreciated.
I'm into old-school hip hop and I know that most of my favorite albums were recorded on analog tape. From what I've gathered, it's only the high end professional 2" tape recorders that would give me "that warm analog sound". Apparently, anything less will give me a lot of noise, hiss, etc. Would you guys agree? Regarding a computer DAW, I see a lot of people complain about the "digital sound". Is it true that once I have my audio recorded in a computer, every time I touch it (move it, add gain, put an effect on it, etc...), the software has to re-draw all those 1s and 0s and do it really fast. So fast that sometimes it loses some of the 1's and 0's so it dithers it? Meaning I am losing a little bit of the signal each time.... Could this contribute to the "thin digital" sound? I know that the AD/DA converters are very important, but still......
I also read about combining digital and analog together. Recording everything into a software program, mix in software and then record the final master onto a tape or recording onto a tape and then dumping it into a software for mixing. Do you guys have experience with this kind of set-up? Would you recommend it?
My current set-up consists of hardware samplers/sequencers and Tascam M-320 mixer. That's all I have.
Any help and tips would be greatly appreciated.