@MS said:
I've always been of the opinion that investing in a better coffee machine and higher quality coffe beans - will give you a better end result than an esoteric analog summing box. I stand by this opinion.
LOL[:D]
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@MS said:
[...] I've always been of the opinion that investing in a better coffee machine and higher quality coffe beans - will give you a better end result than an esoteric analog summing box. I stand by this opinion.
To Peter: The point is that there are most likely more crucial aspects in your working enviroment than the question if some analogue distortion will give you better mixes or not. Personally, I always suggest to invest in room acoustics rather than some "tasty" additions to the signal chain. Chances are 90:10 that your mixes will improve although the components used remained the same, just because you will hear more easily what's going on.
RME offer very good quality in their pricerange. If you want to hear a _real_ difference, you have to aim for Weiss, Prism, Lavry or similar hi-end converters, though.
If you want that "analogue" flavour in a digital box, combined with nice converters, get a HEDD-192 from CraneSong.
@pscart said:
Just to reiterate. The S/R converter is in Logic then and not through the DIGI 002 right? Also, in using even my cheap Mackie mixer to mix "outside of the box" gave me a noticeable sound difference; More dimension and everything got it's sonic space back. The only thing, as I said was a small amount of noise was introduced. I'm sure a quieter summing amp would eliminate this. I should post the sound files. People who were not even musicians noticed a huge difference. So I beg to differ on your opinion of summing amplifiers. -Peter
Before you do that, check that the examples are matched volume-wise, down to 0.01 dB. Most of the time, people are fooled by mere volume changes: Louder is always "better".
That said, I happily admit that I _love_ analogue distortion - but it doesn't make a bad mix sound good.
@pscart said:
Hello Dietz, Thanks so much for the info. Should I invest in the Apogee Ensemble for the front end? Will that make a difference in the sound of the VSL samples, or is that completely bypassed when the samples are triggered? I'm just trying to figure out if it matters to virtual instruments what front end you have, or does that only affect what's recorded 'live'? Thanks. -Pete
You're welcome.
A good converter frontend always makes sense, but it has no _direct_ effect on the samples of an Vienna Instrument. You could listen to them in 8-bit mono, and as long as you bounce your mix internally, the final output will sound perfectly fine when played on a proper audio system.
The opposite is true when you plan to mix externally on an analogue console (or summing bus, or whatever). In this scenario, the converters will of course have direct effect on the sound quality you will be able to achieve.
HTH,