MissMittens
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,628
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- Philadelphia USA
I think that the point Chas was trying to make is that Pro Tools has taken away the performance because you can piece together music so easily now. Most music is recorded in isolated overdubs now. This is done partly because many of the performers are not up to live recording. But it’s also done just because of what the recording technique has become because of Pro Tools.
I hate to disagree, but it was already being done with analog recording equipment for decades before Pro Tools came along. Remember the Beatles? All the layered multi-track recordings they did as far back as Sgt. Pepper?
Many listeners no longer have ears for performance. They are used to sonic homogenization. Auto tuners and so forth add to the “sound” that people expect these days. Add to that, that records are now mixed for ipods and crummy computer speakers and they have never sounded so horrible sonically.
I will agree with you there. The mix is horrible these days. It's completely bass-focused with little aural definition in the mid or high ranges.
In theory though, you are correct that Pro Tools in itself has not really killed the sound of records. But what has come hand in hand with Pro Tools, has. Since anybody in essence can record, “anybody” does. They don’t necessarily use good microphones and they don’t necessarily use an analogue pre amp. Those are the most important components to making a warm sounding recording.
The last point about Pro Tools is that a group had to have its act together in the older days to put out a record. Because you had to have a record company behind you to do so, it meant that you had to have a demo to shop to record companies. To even get that far, you had to be relatively serious.
I partially agree. I don't think that the majority of us hear what Joe Schmoe mixed using Pro Tools in his basement. What we hear are professionally-engineered recordings using Pro Tools, which have crappy mixes to people like us, but yet they're playing to their market - bass focus for the kids who want to vibrate the tag on the back of their cars and pretend to sing.
As for recording a demo, it's still done today. Only usually at a Pro Tools studio and not a studio using tape. I can't tell you the last time I saw ADAT in a studio, unless it was being recorded onto a hard drive in ADAT format.
3/4" reel was long gone when I started in the industry.
While we're on tape, I wonder how many FL loungers know that Bing Crosby had a lot to do with 3/4" tape, and actually magnetic tape of all kinds for A/V use?