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 | |  | | | Author: | Rip Rowan | Created: | Tuesday, July 17, 2007 9:45 AM |  | | Articles by the ProRec Team |
By Bill Park on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
I can't remember the first John Hardy M-1 advertisement that I saw. It seems as if that smallish ‘The John Hardy Company' ad has always graced the back pages of the trade magazines that I read. I remember thinking that this simple little draftsman-like line art drawing could not possibly induce anyone to purchase the product, and the paucity of accompanying information did not help.
Little has changed over the years. The ad has gotten a little larger and contains a little more information, like the fact that they take credit cards now. But it is still a simple black line drawing of the front panel of an M-1, with one knob, one meter, and three switches. I remember thinking, "Doesn't look like much to get excited about." Then I started to read the posts and recommendations about it.
There used to be an active community of recording engineers, technical engineers, producers, mastering engineers, the occasional artist, and a lot of coders at a particular spot on line. I became a membe ...
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| By Bill Park on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
When I think of the M-1, I think of high-quality audio, and a product that eschews the bells and whistles and flashing lights that are so prevalent on products today.
I certainly agree on "quality". I encourage customers to take the cover off of the M-1 and take a look inside. I am proud of the quality of design, quality of construction, quality of parts, serviceability, long term reliability, ruggedness, etc.
I apply common sense, practicality, and quality to my designs. I use the word "Excellence" in my ads. I don't want my front panels to look like a lava flow. That would be counter productive. After all, are we running a fashion show, or trying to get a job done in the most efficient way possible? The front panels have a brushed, black anodized finish with white markings for the greatest contrast ratio when reading those markings. This is a traditional finish, and for good reason. The front panel and particularly the knobs have a non-reflective finish to elimin ...
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| By Bill Park on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
Now, I'm about to tell you guys some lies, and I'm gonna tell you some truths.
The lies will all be relative lies, pertinent to given situations and changeable as life or the mind of your last squeeze. The truths will always be true no matter what you or I might try to do to change them.
Instead of thinking of them as ‘lies' and ‘truths', I like to think of them as ‘Rules' and ‘Laws'. Man makes up ‘Rules', and these rules really don't stand for much. They are basically pointers to good behavior. Sometimes he even tries to call some of these rules ‘Laws'. But they are just fancy rules, and all rules are made to be bent, circumvented, broken, twisted, spray painted, shat upon, and otherwise abused. On the other hand, God and Nature have concocted the ‘Laws'. "Laws' are inviolate. There is no way around, over, under, or through a Law. It applies, and there just isn't anything that we can do about it, other than to learn to live within the ...
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| By Daniel Hines on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
Well, it's been a few months since I last reviewed the latest "must-have" gear for ProRec, but I think you'll find the wait was well worth it.
This month's installment features the Dr. Z Carmen Ghia 15 Watt all tube guitar amplifier. For those of you who aren't familiar with Dr. Z amplifiers, think Matchless or TopHat. True boutique amps. Hand-wired. All tube. Class A. Bulletproof. Stunning.
Meet Dr. Z
Dr. Z, known to regular people as Mike Zaite, is the creative genius who blesses us with these incredible amps. Mike has a background in production engineering and medical technology. The result? Hand-crafted amplifiers that are consistent piece to piece, and manufactured to exact specifications.
Mike's intention was to design amps that would be as highly regarded as Matchless (now defunct), but much easier to maintain. As Mike stated, "Matchless amps were great units with superb sound. But they were designed using really esoteric, high-dollar tubes and part ...
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| By Ethan Winer on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
As I mentioned earlier, I used the Vienna SoundFont editor to organize the patches in my master SoundFont file. The first step was to build a series of "audition" files, so I could compare the dozens of similar instruments side by side. Vienna includes a bank manager that lets you copy patches from one SoundFont file to another, so I built one file with every clarinet, another with every electric bass, and so forth. Unfortunately, many of the instruments were programmed to play in the wrong octave. So before I could compare them, I had to transpose the Coarse Pitch for those instruments up or down an octave, and then adjust the key range each sample occupies in the Instrument definition to compensate.
Once I had chosen the best patches in each category, I loaded the 8 MB SoundFont that came with my Live card, and one by one replaced sounds with the better versions. In some cases I kept the original patches, if they were good, and added the new instruments to other banks. For example, I ended up wit ...
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| By Ethan Winer on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
Several months ago I was mixing a symphony I had sequenced for a local composer when I noticed the French horns were fuzzy in one channel. It was that unmistakable sound of a bad connection, the kind that goes away when you wiggle the wires. I have a fairly complex setup comprising seven external synthesizers, a computer with dozens of audio programs and two sound cards, a rack full of outboard effects, and a 48-input mixer to combine all the outputs.
The fuzzing horn patch was coming from my Yamaha SY77 synthesizer, so I reached in the back and unplugged and reseated both stereo pairs of phone plugs. The fuzz was still there, so I fiddled with, in turn, the wires from the SY77 to the noise gates, the noise gates to the mixer, and the mixer to the power amp. Nothing helped, and all I could do was ignore it for the time being. By the next day, when I was finishing the mix, the fuzz had disappeared as mysteriously as it had appeared. But this experience confirmed what I'd long been considering: It wa ...
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| By Jim Roseberry on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
PIII or Athlon,
That is the question.
Well Shakespeare, I'm here to tell you that in many cases it just doesn't make a damn bit of difference. I'll pull out some numbers in a moment, but the bottom line is that both the Intel PIII Coppermine and AMD's K7 Athlon make exceptional DAW CPUs.
Lineage
Since the birth of the PC DAW, Intel CPUs have been synonymous with top-performance and stability. Having no serious competition over a several year period, end users were forced (for better or worse) into a Wintel world. Windows applications were optimized and tested for use with Intel CPUs - and those Intel CPUs provided FPU (Floating-Point Unit) performance that was heads and shoulders above units from Cyrix and AMD. And so it was…
Here and Now: Serious Competition
After losing the FPU battle for years, AMD went back to the drawing board. The result is their K7 Athlon which packs some serious FPU muscle. Early reports of the Athlon having ...
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| By Pete Leoni on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
Anyone who has had to fool with audio cards knows that compatibility is a real consideraion when putting together an audio computer. Clearly, the Intel processors are the benchmark for compatibility. What are the viable options then?
1. The PIII Coppermine FCPGA "EB" which runs on the 133 Mhz bus and a Motherboard using the VIA Apollo 133 Mhz chipset.
2. The PIII Coppermine FCPGA "E" which runs on the 100 mhz bus and may be successfully overclocked using the Via Apollo chipset at 133 Mhz bus speed
3. The PIII Coppermine FCPGA "E" running on the venerable BX chipset, which is also capable of being overclocked on the 133 Mhz bus.
4. The new Celeron Coppermine FCPGA (AKA "The Celermine") which natively runs at 66 Mhz FSB but may successfully be overclocked to 100 MHz FSB on appropriate motherboards using the Intel BX (or VIA Apollo) chipsets
CPUs: The Issues
1. The PIII Coppermine "EB" chip is made to run natively at 133 FSB. We have already established that t ...
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| By Pete Leoni on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
The Case
Let's begin with the case. For our purposes we need at least a mid-tower ATX case. These have at least three 5.5 inch drive bays, a couple of 3.5 bays and most important of all, plenty of room for air to circulate. Most of the items we are going to discuss today I am going to recommend that you purchase on the web, but the case is one that you might want to consider getting locally, as any savings you may accrue will most likely be eaten up with shipping charges. In any case, (no pun intended), an ATX mid-tower case with a 250 to 300 watt power supply should cost you around $70. One more thing, if the case you find has only one fan (and most do) it would be a good idea to add and additional fan to the front of the case, where you will likely find a port made this purpose
The Motherboard
For our purposes, we will use the ABIT BE6-II. This board still uses the Intel BX chipset which unbelievably is still the highest performing desktop chipset on the market. Although it ...
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| By Pete Leoni on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
It's hard to believe that nearly 2 years have passed since I wrote the original "Roll Your Own" Article!
I have heard from hundreds of you who built the original machines, and I want to take this opportunity to thank every one of you for all of the kind words and input. This time we are going to more than double the performance of that machine, and for only a bit more cash. And for those of you who already own the original Roll Your Own, you will be glad to know that you can pretty much double your machine's current CPU performance for only about $200.
Needless to say, there has been a lot of advancement in computer hardware since the first article was written. As with the original Roll Your Own, our goal will once again be "how to construct a DAW that has the highest possible performance within reasonable economic boundaries".
I realize that this article will be read by those of you who built the origin ...
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| By Pete Leoni on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
For the purposes of this article I am going to assume that most of you have a fairly good knowledge of computers and know how to do things like F-disk and format. If you don't, I bet you have a friend that does. Invite him over, order a pizza, make him some coffee, offer him your significant other.
No, wait a minute, that's going too far.
At least have someone on the hook that you can call to bail you out if you get in over your head. In any case, my intention here is to outline the basic procedures for assembling a bare-bones high performance audio computer from the components that I am using and recommend, and not to go into fine detail.
1. Attach the motherboard to the case using the standoffs that are included with the case.
2. Insert your memory in the proper slots. Consult the schematic in your BE6-II manual.
3. Lift the metal locking arm on the adapter and drop in the CPU (you will see a notch which allows the CPU to drop in ...
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| By Tatiana Nu on Sunday, April 30, 2000 6:00 PM
In our efforts to be all that we can be career wise, we invariably run into several bumps, obstacles and forks in the road. At some point, we may face the question of whether or not we need either degrees, course work or perhaps a shot in the arm in the form of hands on training to accomplish our goals.
We all desire roughly the same things- competence in the form of know how and connections leading to work. But how to get there? When you are early to mid- career, these questions do not have obvious answers. There is no one way to get to where you want to go. All you know is: you want to be there and you want to get there as painlessly as possible.
While this desire is understandable it is one that over time requires the addition of much flexibility and patience. No doubt there will be periods where the path is dismayingly unclear. Sometimes it doesn't even appear obvious what technical know how you really need to have. To confuse matters, there are varying opinions as to ...
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| By Rip Rowan on Friday, March 31, 2000 6:00 PM
The announcement of MOTU's 24i audio interface in the fall of last year gave me mixed feelings. The 24i, which sports 24 balanced +4 inputs and 2 balanced +4 outputs, is clearly the audio interface solution that the computer-based recording community has been asking for. This is an interface targeted at the person who is doing all of their mixing inside the computer, and who wants maximum inputs, but only needs stereo outputs.
We Are Family
MOTU's interface family, which won the ProRec Reader's Choice Award for Best New Audio Interface Technology, is an impressive lineup. If you don't understand how the family operates together, then you'll really miss the point of MOTU's interface products.
 MOTU product family (top to bottom): 2408, 308, 1224, 24i
The core of MOTU's system is the ...
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| By Rip Rowan on Tuesday, February 29, 2000 6:00 PM
Yes, it's possible to make a great-sounding vocal mic for under $1000, but a lot of companies have tried and failed. Shure, however, has a reputation for producing industry-standard mics, like the SM57, SM58, SM81, and SM7, and their entry into this busy market space has been eagerly awaited.
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| By Bob Lichty on Tuesday, February 29, 2000 6:00 PM
We all ended up behind the console for our own reasons. For some, it was a chance to record our legacy, our music that we would share with family and friends forever (and maybe even sell some). For some, once the drugs wore off, the sex became dangerous and the rock and roll a little loud and a little old, it seemed a good alternative to a real job. And there are even some of us who have known all along that our dream job would involve long days, little money, ear fatigue, serious relationship issues and a basic lack of a life for this thing called audio.
Idealism in the Real World
I knew at age sixteen that I wanted to be George Martin. Maybe with some Daniel Lanois, Hugh Padgham, Prince and Jam and Lewis thrown in for good measure. I have always been amazed at the emotional impact music can have on a person. Any genre, if I can feel it, I'll like it. So to have the ability to craft a song and get a performance out that gives goose bumps, well it just seemed to be the perfect career (bes ...
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| By Bruce Richardson on Tuesday, February 29, 2000 6:00 PM
Ultimately this is a review about a microphone: the new, shockingly low-priced Marshall MXL2001P. But the review process on this microphone demands a look at some larger issues as well.
Large-diaphragm condenser microphones are everywhere these days, and for good reason. Due to the different response of a larger and heavier transducer, these mics capture a different "photo," if you will, of the air around them. Large-diaphragm condensers flatter the natural range of vocals in a mix.
As more musicians begin to blur the lines between performer and producer, a huge market has opened up for microphone manufacturers. New manufacturers have stepped in to provide a wider array of products to more consumers... with less experience.
Welcome to the microphone market of the twenty-first century. At no time in history have so many musicians recorded their own music, and at no time have their been so many bewildering choices for these musicians to make. Engineers used to mak ...
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| By Jim Roseberry on Tuesday, February 29, 2000 6:00 PM
When working with digital audio, your system's analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) converters will ultimately determine the fidelity with which you can capture and play back audio.
This is an area where many people getting started with digital audio get confused. "My converters are the latest 24/96 converters," they say. "Isn't 24/96 what I want?"
Converters: What Goes In Must Come Out
The simple fact is that not all converters are created equal.
True, inexpensive 24-bit converters are improving all the time. True, many newer audio interfaces like MIDIMan's Delta 1010 provide very respectable performance (109dB dynamic range). True, for most purposes, this is more than adequate. However, if you wish to attain top performance, you'll have to go with a dedicated set of A/D D/A converters.
So what's available? Many studio owners want world-class performance, but can't justify spending $3000 for a pair converters - especially when their e ...
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| By Robin Hood Brians on Tuesday, February 29, 2000 6:00 PM
The Manley Massive Passive EQ is a perfect example of recognizing that the old way of doing something was the best way. The passive circuitry by which they accomplish the EQ is made up of very stable components. Since they are not active (containing neither tubes or transistors) they generate no noise and generate less phase problems than active EQ. Manley has added a tube amplification section to then build the gain back to its original level (+4) The unit is stereo and each channel has low pass filters which can be set at 18kHz, 12kHz, 9kHz, 7.5kHz, & 6kHz, high pass filters that are switchable from 22Hz, 39Hz, 68Hz, 120Hz, & 220Hz, 4 EQ bands can be set to either shelf or bell curves, boost or cut, a gain control, bandwidth contol, frequency control and an in/out switch.
The Massive Passive has both balanced (XLR) input and output plugs as well as phone jacks which are set at the factory to unbalanced +4. There are provisions internally to change those plugs to -10 and for reversi ...
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| By Bruce Richardson on Monday, January 31, 2000 6:00 PM
There are a couple of orchestral libraries, both by EastWest, that don't really fit the mold of the traditional sample library.Scoring Tools and Symphonic Adventures provide users with a set of fully orchestrated phrase components that can be used in loops, or cobbled together into larger structures. Once these basic structures have been built, one only needs to fill in with some melodic content, and presto, instant score.
In many ways these libraries are more akin to loop collections than to the more common "note per key" GigaSampler libraries. As such, if you used them long enough you could easily construct pieces that would sound similar to those another user might build. Maybe exactly like it.
So, do they actually have value? Is there real work to be achieved with these collections?
Of course. You could just string together combinations of what's on the discs themselves, and make several hours o ...
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| By Bruce Richardson on Monday, January 31, 2000 6:00 PM
Peter Siedlaczek's Advanced Orchestra for GigaSampler (distributed in the US by EastWest) may well be the most-used set of orchestral samples on the planet. Thanks to its wide-ranging palette and reasonable asking price, this is a product that easily qualifies for ProRec's more-for-less club.
Burned onto a five-CD collection, you'll find an extensive set of samples (5455 to be exact) covering the instrumentation of the modern large orchestra. Particularly valuable are the orchestral mallet instruments, including a well-recorded vibraphone. You also get a good collection of woodwind esoterica such as contrabassoon and alto flute. One won't lack for variety.
The Siedlaczek collection, like the Vitous, was originally released for hardware sampler formats, and similarly has received a complete refurbishing to take advantage of GigaSampler's strengths. You'll find an extensive key-switching scheme that allows instant access to standard articula ...
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