0423edcvf
KLASA A
Dołączył: 23 Kwi 2011
Posty: 58
Przeczytał: 0 tematów
Ostrzeżeń: 0/5 Skąd: England
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Wysłany: Pon 3:10, 30 Maj 2011 |
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is fairly commonly accepted statements that if you wait long enough, things always manage to come back into fashion. The VW Beetle is a great example. Bell Bottom pants. Trends in music professional,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], the exception hopefully will be Disco, but you just never know.
The point being is that if you wait long enough,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], no matter what it is you will again find it back in vogue. People are now paying high dollars for analogy devices and for music professional that I actually threw out when things went digital. I wanted the best sounding and clearest signal I could get so out went the old and in came the new. Silly me. If I had just thrown some of that gear into the attic for a few years,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], I could have tripled what I paid for some of it when it was new. Have you priced an original Mini-Moog synthesizer lately? Or how about some of those old Tom Sholz design Rock man boxes? They were way too noisy and complicated to use so they usually just sat there and now people are selling them for outrageous prices IF they are original.
So, you are sitting there scratching your head,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], what the heck is this guy’s point anyway and would he please shut up and make it? The point I am attempting to make is that too often we get caught up in the seeking of what technology can do for us. How what can is being made today make us sound better or do the job of music professional easier. The truth is that if we would concentrate more on learning to use the gear that we have and getting the most that we can out of what we already own, we might be surprised as the devil at how much great sounds we can actually get out of that antiquated piece of gear.
Yes, a digital sample of a bass guitar is crystal clear. But unless you run it through some analogy processing it is never going to be as fat or pat as what you are going to get out of an old Roland Juno. The same goes for recording vocals. Yes you want it as clear as it can be. But then to make it realistic you run it through a tape saturation simulator. Nothing against new gear and technology, I just happen to think that we all need to learn to utilize what we have, no matter what level it is at.
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