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| Studio talkback Tracking, mixing, mastering, microphones, preamps, DAWs, converters, plug-ins, consoles/mixers, HD recorders, comps, 'verbs, FX, monitors, 'phones, power conditioners, wiring, patch bays, studio acoustics, studio vibe. |
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#11
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While your last line is terribly valid and relevant "slap fights" ...it's all a battle for market share. Unfortunately, Digi has a substantial amount of marketing/buying power ...and their business practices ensure that "once you're in PT, you'll stay there, unless you want to spend money to go another route, and forsake most of the money you've spent already." So, it's a question of initial investment. If a studio invests $30k into a HD rig...they've got a pretty substantial reason to stay put. Of course those converters can be used in logic, etc, but you just lost all your plugins, all your session imports are going to be a bitch if you need to work on the old PT sessions, etc. Getting off topic...the whole reason I started this response was to assert that there IS infact a universal exchange format. Digi/Avid calls it OMF (open media file/framework, I forget), others call it AXF, and there another of others. These allow you to import/export your files/regions as they are organized, still independently editable into the new software. It's a genius idea. The hitch of course is that if you want to import/export to/from PT, it's a $500 plug-in (see they've got you coming and going!!!). Most other softwares (Logic) include OMF/AXF export (and maybe import?) standard, which is very cool; unfortunately, if you want to get your logic session into PT, it's gonna cost that importing studio $500....and most music studios don't have it, and won't unless they have a number of sessions coming in that way. Maybe the economy will change as some of you have discussed to a "hey man, if you can't take my Cubase sessions I'm going elsewhere" mentality...but, we'll see Sound for picture or Post-audio houses generally have it, because they deal w/ OMF exports from Avid (again, industrly standard in Video post due to monopolistic business practices...but slowly declining towards Final Cut Pro(HD)...)So, that's my two cents. |
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#12
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A question from another thread here piqued my intrest. I know that PT offers metering pre and post fader, so you can make sure you aren't clipping the tracks individually in the mixer on playback as well as while recording to disc. Some programs (Reason for one) it doesn't seem to make a difference if the channel faders are all +12 and the master is at oh -18 to avoid clipping or whatever. Does anyone know of other recording apps that have pre/post metering?
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#13
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The advantage of this is that you can leave your faders at 0 and the meters will mirror the input and alert you of overs. One advantage I have found in Sonar is that on each track you can either elect to listen through the track with latency or you have a hard bypass which does not monitor the track at all. This allows you to completely delegate monitoring to the interfaces dsp chip further lowering cpu overhead. One disadvantage of interface based monitor mixing is the lack of plugin support. So unless you have outboard reverb or comp, you can only monitor dry signal. Some interfaces (focusrite's and TC's come to mind) are overcoming this problem by haveing more dsp power inside the interface along with effects racks for the monitor section. |
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#14
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So say for example Sonar; while you're listening through the track, if you boost too much does Sonar alert you of clipping after the fader? I think some apps don't, which is a bummer. |
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#15
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#16
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#17
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Okay, now that we are way OT, weren't we talking about the ubiquity of protools or something. |
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#18
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old post. but a good read and worth the bump i think.
I think it's unrealistic to ask a studio to have a pro setup with all the plugins across all the major software platforms. Part of the deal with the studio is they want you to track there, of course they'll mix your stuff if they can, but 95% of the clients want to track and mix there, not just mix stuff from home. It's like asking a toyota dealership to do work on a ford with specific parts, they dont carry them becuase they want you to buy toyota. Studios make more money (and usually charge less per hour) for tracking and mixing packages than just a day of mixing. |
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#19
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I'm a little confused about who is wanting to bring their DAW projects into a studio and why they are doing this.
As far as I know, all projects use a wav or aiff to store the audio. If you want to record everything on your inferior home equipment and then hire a pair of "Trained ears" to mix it, why are you bringing your whole cubase project into the studio? Why don't you just give them the unprocessed audio files? You're not going to add eq and compression and cheap plugins to it only to have them fix it with their better plugins, right? This is how it works in all DAW's, including protools, right? |
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