Hardware

Drowning In Gear Porn…

Dudes…

It’s been a long time since I really posted any new Gear Porn.  That’s about to change!

I have a HUGE BONER for some new stuff that I’m going to write about over the next few weeks. I’d like to get your feedback on:

The new MOTU 828MK3 with onboard effects

MOTU 828 MK3

The new Line6 POD X3 Live

Line6 POD X3 Live

I’m also going to do a review of Digital Perfomer 6 (anyone know when DP6 is really gonna ship?).

Plus, my pal just turned me onto a GREAT new drum sampler  – Addictive Drums

Talk you soon…

Brian

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MOTU

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The Mac DAW / DP / HDR “controversy”

The debate rages on, timeless. Someone posts something about one platform being “professional” and the other being “outdated”. It even spawns the Mac versus PC demon sometimes. Well, guess what happened again recently… Somebody wanted to know more about switching to a Mac / DP rig and all hell breaks loose – AGAIN.

Like most of these arguments, this one is stupid for a couple of reasons but primarily because no one gets to be “RIGHT” about this. Everything depends on the particular user involved.

The case for linear hard disk recorders:

They are ultimately the modern replacement for the analog multitrack tape machine. Signal directly to “tape”. Rock solid, no head alignment or bias bullshit. No “erasing” the contacts on the cards in the old MCI machine with a pencil eraser. (Am I dating myself as a 2″ kinda guy?).

If you have lots of good outboard gear, you can mix right from a console “old-new school style”. If you want to edit or mix in a DAW, you’ll need to move that audio into the computer.

That takes extra steps and time but is by no means a “problem”. You’d have to fly tracks into ProTools from 2″ too. You can record tracks into the computer digitally in real time or you can import files much faster using a swappable drive system or some of the onboard networking capabilities of the current crop of recorders. Some even have firewire/USB2 for this purpose.

I don’t think this approach is necessarily yesterday’s technology as much as it is a modern equivalent of time-tested professional workflow paradigms. For example, Radar24 is a popular pro-tools haters compromise in LA because its analog section sounds good and it works just like a tape machine, only
no waiting for the transport.

When you’re on the clock spending someone else’s money, or doing live remotes where you can’t do a 2nd take, or when you just want to have a capture/archive collection method for the source audio, a linear HDR makes a lot of sense.

Now, have you noticed something? Most of the primary benefits and functionality of this type of rig is geared towards the needs and wants of the professional ENGINEER, PRODUCER, or STUDIO. From the perspective of any of these, an HDR is a clear advantage for a variety of reasons, namely rock-solid reliability and compatibility with established methodology.

The case for the computer-based DAW:

For the COMPOSER, PERFORMER, or ARTIST, there is much to be gained from using a computer based DAW as both a creative tool as well as an audio recording platform. In fact, the line blurs tremendously when incorporating virtual instruments, plug-ins and the powerful editing/mixing functionalities that simply don’t exist in a real-time, linear playback system. Many artists and engineers become spoiled (so do many records) by the ease of correcting performance problems, tuning a vocal, time-corrections, looping parts, replacing sounds, replacing parts, comping multiple takes, etc.

Then there are the utilitarian benefits for the chronically right-brain “artiste” who is frequently bad at left brain project and file management stuff. The DAW keeps everything together in one place that’s easy to back up to DVD and export out pieces and files.

Then there are the mixing benefits which are still mind-blowing to a kid that thought the installation of Dolby SR was the greatest achievement in audio history in 85 or 86. To have an infinitely expandable, wholly automated console that you make look the way you want and every possible type of audio plug in one click away definitely beats no hiss…

The old saw of this argument is reliability and what I would call “instant response”. There’s a good reason for that argument. Computers are really only in the last few years fast enough to deal with the large amount of number crunching involved in large track count audio. The advantage of a TDM based ProTools rig is that all of the audio processing is done of their own dedicated DSP cards – hence the home equity line price tag.

BUT… We really have reached the age where native, or host-computer only, DAW programs can and do kick reliable ass. I find it FUD like to say that you can’t “trust” a computer daw for reliable tracking. You can’t rely on a FUCKED UP COMPUTER DAW for reliable tracking.

I can rely on mine and anyone who cares to can as well. 9 times out of 10, problems with computer
recording are the result of individual, personal and subjective issues. Your computer with your particular interface with this set of circumstances doesn’t work = DAWs are unreliable. Bullshit.

Now it sucks for YOU if your computer DAW doesn’t work well but I can tell you that my formula is not
complex or difficult to duplicate.

A MOTU 828 with a modern Mac and DP5 works really fucking well.

Maybe a derivation from that formula will also work well, I don’t know and I don’t really give a shit because mine works. CAVEAT: OF COURSE there are bugs in DP and things occasionally do weird stuff. But even then, you can decide on what version of a program you want to run. With each version comes
new features and new issues. You pick and choose your battles. There is always a well documented sort of “status” of issues and new features. The idiotic audio drop out during bounce to disk bug that MOTU fixed in their last update to DP for example.

When something ISN’T working right, it can almost ALWAYS be attributable to lack of enough ram or horsepower. Something that I COULD do something about by buying more ram or a faster computer if I’m bumping the wall on track counts or available plug ins.

Remember, you haven’t bought a $20k ProTools rig, you spent a couple grand on a Mac and the Motu shit. More fast or more stuff equals faster computer with more memory. Do that and everything will work very happily for you in Mac/DP land.

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MOTU
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New MOTU 8pre Versus Behringer ADA8000, Focusrite OctoPre



MOTU 8pre

Just released is the brand new MOTU 8pre – Multi-channel Mic Preamp/Converter/Firewire Audio Interface. Clearly, the new MOTU 8 pre comes as a move to keep some of the dollars being spent in the hot 8-channel single rack unit mic-pre/ADAT converter space all under the MOTU tent.

For many DP users, simply having such a choice as the 8pre, coming directly from MOTU, supported natively in Digital Performer, would be reason enough to choose the 8pre over other similarly featured boxes.

And there is some logic to that idea, especially as the MOTU 8pre can be used as either a primary or supplemental audio interface (for example, adding to an existing Traveler or 828 MKII) or it can be used strictly as a stand-alone 96K A/D D/A converter via ADAT – even when disconnected from the computer, making for a very flexible set up.

The 8pre also a cool way to be able to have multiple interfaces that you can split out for mutiple purposes – you could grab the 8pre and go with a Powerbook, then easily came back to the studio and hook back up to a larger MOTU rig connected to a desktop DAW.

However, I’m going to come right out and blaspheme against the MOTU faithful a little by saying that I’m not really that impressed by the 8pre.

The mic preamps have never been a strong point of MOTU’s audio interface line (particularly and maybe only because of their lack of gain) and so, right off the bat, you’ve got a fundamental issue with the primary function of this box. It’s an 8 channel mic pre, that’s not that great as a mic pre. So the MOTU 8pre is kind of an “eh” for me.

If you really don’t need the firewire audio interface functionality but just want an additional clean 8 mic/line inputs to hang off the ADAT port on your existing interface, the Behringer ADA8000 Ultragain Pro 8-Channel A/D D/A Converter is pretty hard to beat for the disposable price.

Behringer ADA8000 Ultragain Pro 8-Channel A/D D/A Converter

I know, I know… It’s a Behringer, but they actually (surprisingly?) got the ADA8000 right and it’s doesn’t cost much more than a decent patch bay.

Then, when you consider what you can buy in the same price range as the MOTU 8pre, you can get yourself significantly better mic preamps with the Focusrite Octopre LE.

Focusrite OctoPre LE 8-Channel Microphone Preamp

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MOTU Ships PCI-424 Universal Binary Drivers For Intel Macs

image.jpegIf you’ve been putting off upgrading your Mac until the Universal Binary drivers for your MOTU PCIe 424 card arrive, wait no more..

MOTU has just announced that they are shipping the Intel ready UB drivers for their PCI-424 card based systems, including the 2408mk3, HD192, and 24io core systems.

Now you have no more excuses about buying that bad-ass new Intel-Xeon Quad Core Mac Pro Tower!.

Download the PCI-424 Universal Binary (Intel Mac) Drivers from MOTU.com

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A case for MOTU/DP versus the All In One DAW

Can you describe what it is about the DP experience that you feel is superior?

In short, sound quality, interoperability, ease and power of editing, scalability/open-endedness.

At the cost of rock-solid, never-fail, dedicated-box reliability – although that difference becomes negligible if you dedicate/prioritize the Mac to audio.

Computers fuck up. Fact of life. Hardware boxes fuck up too, just less often. Anything with a hard drive in it is susceptible to disk crashes and such. Buy enough RAM and hard drive space and you greatly minimize those factors on a Mac. RAM is the NUMERO UNO upgrade to make to any Mac (or
computer at all, really).

What about the user interface?

DP is a very customizable workspace that adapts and adjusts to your needs/wants/workflow in a variety of ways. You set up the windows you want, where you want, how you want, on as many monitors as you want, as big or as small as you want – and you can just save the screensets and switch them around as needs dictate. Try that on a VS or any all in one box.

What effects are easily (i.e. cheaply) available?

Any MAS plug in, including lots of built-in effects, some of which actually sound quite good.

Masterworks EQ is marvelously good and I use it on everything from mixing to mastering.

Cheaply available are any plug ins that count, really. There’s a MAS or AU version of nearly anything and DP natively supports both. They also run VST plug ins using a “wrapper” software you can buy and install.

Are there Melodyne-like plugins? Autotune?

Funny you mention Melodyne, DP features built-in, non-destructive pitch correction and automation very similar to Melodyne, very similar.

And, yes, both Melodyne and AutoTune are fully supported widely used.

> I really wish I could see it in action.

Any major music chain store will have a copy to show you. I’d be pretty surprised if they didn’t have it running somewhere (er, no, I wouldn’t but that’s another post!). Unfortunately or wisely depending on your point of view, MOTU has never made a demo available. They view AudioDesk that comes with the hardware as the demo, I suppose (and it pretty much is).

One reason it attracts me is the idea of carrying a laptop around with me rather than a big dedicated box.

Mhmmm. ABSOLUTELY. One of the major reasons to get out of the box and into the Mac with your audio. It all usually ends up in a computer eventually nowadays anyway, why resist the inevitable? – grin -

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Digital Performer
Gear Porn
Hardware
MOTU
Mac
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Analog & Clock Mods for MOTU Firewire Hardware

There has been much conversation lately in the MOTU Mac community about “modding” MOTU hardware to improve it’s analog signal path and digital clock. It’s definitely a very hot topic as the mods cost generally between $250-$400.

Those the do the mods, as well as those that have had the work done, say that the improvements to the analog section have a remarkable impact. There is also an upgrade to the digital clock that claims to greatly reduce jitter (BlackLion Audio feels the clocks are very jittery to begin with).

If, indeed, these mods bring MOTU’s firewire line of audio interfaces (as well as their PCI counterparts) into a class of performance reserved for RME, Apogee and other truly professional, world-class devices, it’s not going to stay a secret much longer!

Read more about it here:

http://blacklionaudio.com/motu_firewire_mod.html

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Hardware
MOTU
Pro Audio

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MOTU’s PCIe-424 PCI Express card shipping

Many of the legion of MOTU audio hardware and Digital Performer users have been holding off on the purchase of a new G5 because of the lack of a PCIe version of the 424 PCI interface card that connects their MOTU audio interfaces to the computer. Well, wait no more!

You can officially pull the trigger. MOTU is shipping their PCIe-424! Cost is $295

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MOTU’s new UltraLite

MOTU Ultralite
Details About The Brand New UltraLite by MOTU

This is a killer little half-rack space firewire audio interface. Sort of like a baby 828MKII or Mini-Traveler.

The most significant things at first glance are the use of the Traveler’s higher gain mic preamps and the absence of ADAT I/O.

This would fit great in a rack next to MOTU’s half-space MIDI interfaces. It could be the perfect audio interface for a rack of midi gear and/or a laptop full of VI’s in a small, portable rig.

Well suited for a small, project studio, the UltraLite could be a better choice than an 828MKII or Traveller if you don’t require ADAT connectivity. It’s cheaper and has the improved, high-gain mic pre’s, what’s not to like about that?

It’s on the back page of all the gear porn rags this month and MOTU.com has a whole section. Go MOTU…

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MOTU
Pro Audio

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