
mark4man
MoonMix Studios
People...
I recently acquired a Grace Design 101 mic/inst. pre for my project studio. Sounds beautiful. A few months ago, I acquired a Korg D1600mkII digital multitracker for location recording. Sounds beautiful.
Now...I know enough about classes of operation & component quality to be able to understand that the Grace is heads & heels above the Korg in performance (& I'm sure when I get around to an a/b test I'll hear the difference)...but I wonder...
...There's lots of little project studios around that record local artists, using for example, Mackie mixers, w/ their onboard XDR pre’s. Those guys swear by their boards...wouldn't have anything else. There's also lots of little project studios around that have racks of external pre's...RNP's & Focusrite's & dbx's & Great River's & Langevin's & MindPrint's, etc. Those guys swear by their gear, also.
Today I read a review on a $200 pro audio level 1/2 rack stereo pre...& it says it's super quiet & faithfully reproduces signal with quality & headroom that would rival any studio console.
What's goin' on? Who's right? Is everybody right? Has the quality of even cheaply produced components reached a point where good signal amplification is less than a hundred bucks per channel (& doesn't sound that much different from units at $500 a channel?) Forget the differences between tube & xformer & solid-state; & the coloration of the sound produced...I'm talking about; it seems like they can take a preamp design from a quality mixer (which is crammed side-by-side w/ 15 other identical pre's), put two of them in an external box & have a boutique product with a high price tag.
So...what's the difference? Does Class-A operation sound only marginally better than Class-A mode? Are the op-amp based pre's in a pro audio level board only a teeny, tiny bit more spurious than the self-biasing, fully differential, DC servoed, transimpedance instrumentation amps in a free-standing boutique model?
Can the indie artist walking into the studio off the street hear the difference? Can the mastering engineer?
[I know this a philosophical type rant...but I'm interested in hearing opinions on the state of the art from other members.]
Thanks,
mark4man
I recently acquired a Grace Design 101 mic/inst. pre for my project studio. Sounds beautiful. A few months ago, I acquired a Korg D1600mkII digital multitracker for location recording. Sounds beautiful.
Now...I know enough about classes of operation & component quality to be able to understand that the Grace is heads & heels above the Korg in performance (& I'm sure when I get around to an a/b test I'll hear the difference)...but I wonder...
...There's lots of little project studios around that record local artists, using for example, Mackie mixers, w/ their onboard XDR pre’s. Those guys swear by their boards...wouldn't have anything else. There's also lots of little project studios around that have racks of external pre's...RNP's & Focusrite's & dbx's & Great River's & Langevin's & MindPrint's, etc. Those guys swear by their gear, also.
Today I read a review on a $200 pro audio level 1/2 rack stereo pre...& it says it's super quiet & faithfully reproduces signal with quality & headroom that would rival any studio console.
What's goin' on? Who's right? Is everybody right? Has the quality of even cheaply produced components reached a point where good signal amplification is less than a hundred bucks per channel (& doesn't sound that much different from units at $500 a channel?) Forget the differences between tube & xformer & solid-state; & the coloration of the sound produced...I'm talking about; it seems like they can take a preamp design from a quality mixer (which is crammed side-by-side w/ 15 other identical pre's), put two of them in an external box & have a boutique product with a high price tag.
So...what's the difference? Does Class-A operation sound only marginally better than Class-A mode? Are the op-amp based pre's in a pro audio level board only a teeny, tiny bit more spurious than the self-biasing, fully differential, DC servoed, transimpedance instrumentation amps in a free-standing boutique model?
Can the indie artist walking into the studio off the street hear the difference? Can the mastering engineer?
[I know this a philosophical type rant...but I'm interested in hearing opinions on the state of the art from other members.]
Thanks,
mark4man