Thank you for letting me have it for free.

Sorry to tell you that I will need another two years to do a second albumWhat are your future plans for your music? You are very talented and I hope to hear more of your work.
I use an outdated sequencer called massiva. It is the best sequencer for me (comming from Amigas Bars&Pipes). But it's possibilities for soundrecording are very limited.But apropos what kind of music making software are you using? Most of the time these have a semi-multi track recording on board...
Here is my humble gear:How is your setup meaning which keyboards, synths, trackers, drumbox you are using? Or is all on ONE pc?
In my technical opinion NO never as long as digital is your 'output', being the net or CD or any other digital media (MP3) it is VERY important to keep the analog path as short as possible. Sure if you want to use an overdrive or a wah wah pedal after your electric guitar that is oke, because yes you have to use it (althow there are very good digital vst's for that now).traumatic wrote:Depends on the sound you're after, doesn't it?Jan Vooijs wrote:Remember keep it digital as long as possible!! Meaning the analog chain must be kept short. If you record from a mike record it directly digital.
While this may be not the right place to discuss things like this, I'd be gladJan Vooijs wrote:In my technical opinion NO never as long as digital is your 'output', being the net or CD or any other digital media (MP3) it is VERY important to keep the analog path as short as possible. Sure if you want to use an overdrive or a wah wah pedal after your electric guitar that is oke, because yes you have to use it (althow there are very good digital vst's for that now).Depends on the sound you're after, doesn't it?
Well, I say we both are right in our respective fields. Yes analog is 'best' sound wise!! But NOT noise wise (s/n ratio). Yes I would prefer taping in 2" tape (analog) but for distribution you need digital today. Coming out of the analog world, sound wise myself (47 yrs) i went digital (recording) some 12 odd years ago, loved every minute of it!! The easy of "splice the tape" is so much comfertable digital and SOOO accurate (100%) I love it! Same goes for Video editting, analog = not so exact edit. Digital on the frame accurate (working on a movie this moment in Liquid Pro, steep learning curve but worth the effort).traumatic wrote:There's no convincing digital emulation of tapes, tubes, etc.
until today. Recording drums for example, I'd always go analog (2" tape).
(Ok, if I could afford it) Also, mixing on an analog console is just an entirely
different world - soundwise.
Of course I know what you mean, going digital doesn't add noise, still
it's a matter of sound.