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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 7:47:04 GMT -6
Hi! Correct me if I have gotten the wrong idea, but I see people recording onto tape and then transferring that to their DAW to edit. But wouldn't it also work to just record everything into - say - ProTools, edit/comp everything to your hearts desire, and then recording the seperate signals from PT onto the 24-track? What is the actual difference between recording a mic signal straight to tape and recording the same signal out of ProTools onto tape? Is there a difference? Since digital doesn't add to the signal, the dry unprocessed signal from PT should be the same as just plugging a mic into a console and straight into tape? Or have I missed something?
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ericn
Temp
Balance Engineer
Posts: 16,107
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Post by ericn on Jan 25, 2023 7:50:48 GMT -6
Recording on to tape first in theory gives you some compression, so for many that means using less outboard. For a lot of people tape is as much about the workflow as the sound.
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Post by trakworxmastering on Jan 25, 2023 8:22:25 GMT -6
I've done it both ways. Hitting tape first just sounds better. I have a couple of ideas why:
1 - Hitting tape after the DAW means more trips through AD/DA converters, especially if you record it back into the DAW for mixdown.
2 - When you record straight to tape you use VU meters instead of peak meters to set the levels, and you get to listen to playback and adjust levels. This tends to get optimal results out of the tape machine, as the levels can end up quite different than what you'd set going straight to digital. A unity gain transfer from digital doesn't work the same. You could run all the tracks through a console and reset levels as you go, but that's a PITA and a lot more circuitry in the signal path, but it does help.
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Post by EmRR on Jan 25, 2023 8:51:18 GMT -6
I'd think you'd want to treat it like an initial recording, including leaving a lot of processing off. But sure, get the edits and the comps first.
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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 10:02:40 GMT -6
I'd think you'd want to treat it like an initial recording, including leaving a lot of processing off. But sure, get the edits and the comps first. That's the point. Absolutely no processing panning or anything at all. Just straight into PT, edit and comp for 40 hours until the whole track is completely done, then record the edited tracks to tape just like your would record anything straight to tape, and then back into PT for mix, and the print the mix to a 2-track. This should achieve the same result as recording straight to a 24-track machine, right? Other than perhaps a few trips through conversion, but if the conversion is top notch, I'm guessing that wouldn't be much of a problem, and would only result in differences that would be substantially less than for example changing the microphone for another, right?
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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 10:10:24 GMT -6
I've done it both ways. Hitting tape first just sounds better. I have a couple of ideas why: 1 - Hitting tape after the DAW means more trips through AD/DA converters, especially if you record it back into the DAW for mixdown. 2 - When you record straight to tape you use VU meters instead of peak meters to set the levels, and you get to listen to playback and adjust levels. This tends to get optimal results out of the tape machine, as the levels can end up quite different than what you'd set going straight to digital. A unity gain transfer from digital doesn't work the same. You could run all the tracks through a console and reset levels as you go, but that's a PITA and a lot more circuitry in the signal path, but it does help. Regarding your second point: Why would it matter if using VU meters to set the levels? I mean, you'd set the levels on the tape machine using VU meters to adjust level just like you would if recording straight to tape, considering we're treating the output from ProTools like an output from a microphone. I'm talking about sending for example 8 drum tracks from PT like it was just the signal going straight out of the console into the tape machine, then adding the rest of the instruments/vocals the same way, basically doing the exact same thing and building the track the same way you'd do with a 24-track machine in 1979, and not setting levels within PT at all, but rather doing all that to tape instead. Other than several trips through conversion, it should be the exact same thing as recording straight to tape, right? Or am I missing something? It seems to me a signal from PT and a signal from a microhone through a preamp is 100% the same thing and should work the same going into the tape machine?
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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 10:12:20 GMT -6
Recording on to tape first in theory gives you some compression, so for many that means using less outboard. For a lot of people tape is as much about the workflow as the sound. But shouldn't recording to tape after PT give you the exact same compression? I mean, as long as the signal is hitting the tape the same way, there shouldn't be a difference, right?
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Post by trakworxmastering on Jan 25, 2023 10:32:22 GMT -6
I've done it both ways. Hitting tape first just sounds better. I have a couple of ideas why: 1 - Hitting tape after the DAW means more trips through AD/DA converters, especially if you record it back into the DAW for mixdown. 2 - When you record straight to tape you use VU meters instead of peak meters to set the levels, and you get to listen to playback and adjust levels. This tends to get optimal results out of the tape machine, as the levels can end up quite different than what you'd set going straight to digital. A unity gain transfer from digital doesn't work the same. You could run all the tracks through a console and reset levels as you go, but that's a PITA and a lot more circuitry in the signal path, but it does help. Regarding your second point: Why would it matter if using VU meters to set the levels? I mean, you'd set the levels on the tape machine using VU meters to adjust level just like you would if recording straight to tape, considering we're treating the output from ProTools like an output from a microphone. I'm talking about sending for example 8 drum tracks from PT like it was just the signal going straight out of the console into the tape machine, then adding the rest of the instruments/vocals the same way, basically doing the exact same thing and building the track the same way you'd do with a 24-track machine in 1979, and not setting levels within PT at all, but rather doing all that to tape instead. Other than several trips through conversion, it should be the exact same thing as recording straight to tape, right? Or am I missing something? It seems to me a signal from PT and a signal from a microhone through a preamp is 100% the same thing and should work the same going into the tape machine? Yes, that's what I said in my last sentence. (though I think many would disagree that the signal is 100% the same thing, nothing is perfect, but with a great interface it's close.) You can do it but it's time consuming and requires more circuitry in the signal path, both in gain stages (console) and converters. There's no such thing as 100% transparent gear. It's not bad, but in practice I got better sounding results by hitting tape first. Maybe you will have different results. You should try it for yourself.
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Post by notneeson on Jan 25, 2023 10:44:56 GMT -6
Hi! Correct me if I have gotten the wrong idea, but I see people recording onto tape and then transferring that to their DAW to edit. But wouldn't it also work to just record everything into - say - ProTools, edit/comp everything to your hearts desire, and then recording the seperate signals from PT onto the 24-track? What is the actual difference between recording a mic signal straight to tape and recording the same signal out of ProTools onto tape? Is there a difference? Since digital doesn't add to the signal, the dry unprocessed signal from PT should be the same as just plugging a mic into a console and straight into tape? Or have I missed something? It seems like the thing you’re missing is experience. That’s not a bad thing, but you’ll only satisfy your curiosity by trying it both ways.
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Post by EmRR on Jan 25, 2023 10:47:09 GMT -6
Yeah level set minimally (console type) processed outputs to the machine as you would if you were recording directly to it at the beginning. Transfer it back. Let the tape sit a week. Transfer it again, see which you like. Do it after a month....
The question of more conversion seems like a thing so many people are comfortably ignoring in their workflows now already, tape is gonna swamp all of that. Recording to tape first and then importing for editing might be better, but is it enough for the workflow differences? Especially if you don't own a machine!
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Post by trakworxmastering on Jan 25, 2023 10:48:04 GMT -6
FWIW, a lot of recording engineers use more compression when recording to tape than when recording to digital because we want to get a good level without distorting, in order to stay well above the noise floor. Recording straight to digital you can leave lots of headroom instead of compressing because the noise floor is a non-issue. That's another way the process differs.
Put simply, you can't expect 2 different processes to sound 100% the same.
That doesn't mean you shouldn't do whatever makes sense for you and your situation...
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Post by drbill on Jan 25, 2023 11:06:19 GMT -6
I've done it both ways. Hitting tape first just sounds better. I have a couple of ideas why: I agree with Justin. ^^^^^^^^ OP - For sonics - tape first, digitize second. I have different reasons *why* than Justin, but that's my experience. Once you hit the A/D for the first time, something is lost that you can't recover. It's not lost when you hit tape. Or I guess to be honest, some of it is, but it's lost in a really GREAT way which is why you're even suggesting this exercise to begin with. More of an additive process than digital's subtractive process. (That's the best way I can put it. It's pretty intangible and hard to put into words.) Unless you've lived with a tape machine day after day and really come to instinctively realize what it's doing to the sonics at various levels, various speeds, which track you're recording too, etc., there is a good chance you'll just think I'm a crackpot. Of course, from pure convenience, putting the DAW first - then editing, comping, etc. and using the tape machine as an "effect processor" later seems the way to go. IME, it's not if you are after the sound of tape. Capture it first before digitizing.
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Post by trakworxmastering on Jan 25, 2023 11:07:18 GMT -6
Here's another difference: Musicians often play differently when recording to tape because they don't have the crutch of the DAW to lean on. They tend to try harder.
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Post by drbill on Jan 25, 2023 11:08:25 GMT -6
Here's another difference: Musicians often play differently when recording to tape because they don't have the crutch of the DAW to lean on. They tend to try harder. Absolutely. But I think that may be a different - although fascinating - conversation.
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ericn
Temp
Balance Engineer
Posts: 16,107
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Post by ericn on Jan 25, 2023 11:20:16 GMT -6
Recording on to tape first in theory gives you some compression, so for many that means using less outboard. For a lot of people tape is as much about the workflow as the sound. But shouldn't recording to tape after PT give you the exact same compression? I mean, as long as the signal is hitting the tape the same way, there shouldn't be a difference, right? Compression before any conversion gives you a bit of a safety net, you can hit the conversion a little harder because you’re not afraid of overs as much. For a full band it also means a little less riding levels. If all you’re after is the saturation/ distortion effect, not as much of a difference, but having lived with every incarnation of tape that’s overhyped by those who didn’t come up with tape. I understand your coming at this from a theoretical point of view but from a practical perspective the reason for tracking is tape are these 1. Control of the effect at the start. I can even mult to a synced DAW or mult the output and have a reference to decide if tape is even worth the trouble/ expense. 2. Compression going in to minimize clipping, you have no idea how much less compression we used in the tape days. 3. Work flow, oh I do miss that rewind time where we all caught our breath. Now my advice is go out and find an Otari, Revox or such 2 track and decide if the myth of tape either way is worth it, because there really isn’t a right answer just what works for you.
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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 12:06:15 GMT -6
I've done it both ways. Hitting tape first just sounds better. I have a couple of ideas why: I agree with Justin. ^^^^^^^^ OP - For sonics - tape first, digitize second. I have different reasons *why* than Justin, but that's my experience. Once you hit the A/D for the first time, something is lost that you can't recover. It's not lost when you hit tape. Or I guess to be honest, some of it is, but it's lost in a really GREAT way which is why you're even suggesting this exercise to begin with. More of an additive process than digital's subtractive process. (That's the best way I can put it. It's pretty intangible and hard to put into words.) Unless you've lived with a tape machine day after day and really come to instinctively realize what it's doing to the sonics at various levels, various speeds, which track you're recording too, etc., there is a good chance you'll just think I'm a crackpot. Of course, from pure convenience, putting the DAW first - then editing, comping, etc. and using the tape machine as an "effect processor" later seems the way to go. IME, it's not if you are after the sound of tape. Capture it first before digitizing. Hmm, that makes sense. I use an old great sounding Telefunken 2-track to print my mixes to as it is and is considering a Studer a810 as well, but I'd like to include a 24-track into the equation so that each individual track is passing through the process and getting the much coveted tape compression, rather than just the entire mix. Since I really don't compress anythning these days, some subtle tape compression on each individual track before mixing would be a welcome thing. However, I'm not interested in losing the convenience of PT in the comping/editing stage, which is why I'm trying to figure out how to get the tracks onto a 24-track machine without having to transfer to PT after the fact and manually allign the 60 or so takes to comp. We're talking many hundreds and hundreds of takes on just one song, and having to manually transfer and allign that many tracks in PT from tape seems like literally days of work. This is why I'm trying to find ways to get the same sound without having to deal with tape before editing. Hmmm, could a machine possibly be modified to play back from the tape what is being recorded as it is recorded? Seems like an esotheric thought, but that could be a way to go about it if it works. There's also mix:analog and other services where you can run a mix through tape machines, and I'm wondering how they manage to achieve the same thing.
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Post by Bob Olhsson on Jan 25, 2023 12:29:12 GMT -6
I don't know about compression, but +4 on an API 550 at 100, 5k and 10k into tape always sounded like +2 into digital.
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Post by christopher on Jan 25, 2023 12:31:09 GMT -6
My goal is to offer a service someday for guys like us who want the tape sound. IF I can ever finish my Studer in the DIY section hehe. These beasts are hard to rebuild and many have failed lol.
I can already bounce digital to tape and back and it’s sample accurate using my JH110. MCI are just solid timing wise. I can do a typical 5min 20 track song in about 1 hour. Everything lined up with the original wavs, timstamped, so we could choose the tape vs digital easily. Shockingly even drums show no phase issues..
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Post by chessparov on Jan 25, 2023 12:32:29 GMT -6
"Hundreds of takes" Samuel? You must have the patience of a saint! Chris
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Post by EmRR on Jan 25, 2023 12:34:16 GMT -6
I don't know about compression, but +4 on an API 550 at 100, 5k and 10k into tape always sounded like +2 into digital. ...sets 550 opposite of this....
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Post by samuelpepys on Jan 25, 2023 12:46:26 GMT -6
"Hundreds of takes" Samuel? You must have the patience of a saint! Chris Consider it a continuation of the Steely Dan method. It's my own projects, or projects I'm heavily involved with, and I have all the time in the world to seek perfection from both myself and the musicians I work with, because perfection is an interesting and rewarding goal to chace, it just isn't economical if you run a commercial studio, which luckily I dont
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ericn
Temp
Balance Engineer
Posts: 16,107
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Post by ericn on Jan 25, 2023 13:29:07 GMT -6
I agree with Justin. ^^^^^^^^ OP - For sonics - tape first, digitize second. I have different reasons *why* than Justin, but that's my experience. Once you hit the A/D for the first time, something is lost that you can't recover. It's not lost when you hit tape. Or I guess to be honest, some of it is, but it's lost in a really GREAT way which is why you're even suggesting this exercise to begin with. More of an additive process than digital's subtractive process. (That's the best way I can put it. It's pretty intangible and hard to put into words.) Unless you've lived with a tape machine day after day and really come to instinctively realize what it's doing to the sonics at various levels, various speeds, which track you're recording too, etc., there is a good chance you'll just think I'm a crackpot. Of course, from pure convenience, putting the DAW first - then editing, comping, etc. and using the tape machine as an "effect processor" later seems the way to go. IME, it's not if you are after the sound of tape. Capture it first before digitizing. Hmm, that makes sense. I use an old great sounding Telefunken 2-track to print my mixes to as it is and is considering a Studer a810 as well, but I'd like to include a 24-track into the equation so that each individual track is passing through the process and getting the much coveted tape compression, rather than just the entire mix. Since I really don't compress anythning these days, some subtle tape compression on each individual track before mixing would be a welcome thing. However, I'm not interested in losing the convenience of PT in the comping/editing stage, which is why I'm trying to figure out how to get the tracks onto a 24-track machine without having to transfer to PT after the fact and manually allign the 60 or so takes to comp. We're talking many hundreds and hundreds of takes on just one song, and having to manually transfer and allign that many tracks in PT from tape seems like literally days of work. This is why I'm trying to find ways to get the same sound without having to deal with tape before editing. Hmmm, could a machine possibly be modified to play back from the tape what is being recorded as it is recorded? Seems like an esotheric thought, but that could be a way to go about it if it works. There's also mix:analog and other services where you can run a mix through tape machines, and I'm wondering how they manage to achieve the same thing. With a bunch of smaller tape machines sitting in storage & having owned a 2 in and having been talked down from the ledge of buying more than a 2in machines in the DAW age before you make that leap sit down and figure out how your going to pay for it. I don’t just mean the purchase, I mean the up keep as well, got tech? I mean tape, as well ask anyone with a tape machine how many clients walked in the door craving the sound of tape till they found out the cost. I know the concept of “ my niche is going to be offering 2in, nobody around me offers it. There is this whole community that craves it.” Yeah I have heard it and seen the results of this buisness plan time and time again, what you have to realize is why that old studio that has been around for over 30 years either dumped their tape machine or is selling it, because at this point it isn’t making money!
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Post by christophert on Jan 25, 2023 14:12:32 GMT -6
I much prefer the sound of tape first. I have my Studer set up to dump the tape into ProTools live off the repro head. That way I record direct to tape and Pro Tools simultaneously - and the choice of using either tape or digital at any stage. Transferring Pro Tools to tape I never like the sound of.
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Post by svart on Jan 25, 2023 14:50:07 GMT -6
I actually have a tape machine and have done these very experiments, so I know the difference.
Preamps can give you a much hotter output signal than the outputs of a DAC and it makes it much easier to overdrive the tape (and it's electronics) a bit. You can do it with a DAC, but you start getting into the levels where the DAC outputs might not have enough gain to get the tape to distort.
However, the tape sound is a lot more subtle than anyone knows. A well maintained and aligned machine should NOT be adding a bunch of compression and harmonics to the signal even at pretty hot levels. You have to FORCE this to happen either with really hot input signals, or by purposely aligning the machine so that it becomes nonlinear at much lower levels.
So either way can get you what you want, but a properly aligned machine will only really give you that tape "sound" when you use super-hot preamp outputs pushing it.
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Post by notneeson on Jan 25, 2023 15:18:38 GMT -6
I did a project tracking to a 16 track (converted) mm1200 where we were monitoring via pro tools as our “console.”
Anyway, that particular machine definitely has a sound in input mode alone that contributes color and cohesion. Some people apparently upgrade to Lundahls to make it more transparent, but that strikes me as unnecessary. Anyway, the Ampex essentially adds another discrete transform balanced stage that’s definitely doing something cool to the sound. Something like an Otari might have less of that mojo in the line stages, to pick a random example.
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