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cd burner vs. DAT, cd vs. DAT for recording live |
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Mon 8 Apr 2002, 00:56
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 3
Joined: 08-Apr 02
From: Phoenix
Member No.: 4,171
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I am looking to purchase a recording unti to capture live performance without interuption, to then be dumped into my computer later for mixing, editing, mastering etc..
My current set-up is
tiBook 667 iMac DVSE Tascam US-428 Cubase VST 5.1 several pairs of stereo-matched pair mics Pre-sonus mp20 preamp Pre-sonus blue-tube preamp ART Tube EQ Furman Conditioner
The 428 is great, but it still requires a computer and their is the chance of crashing. My group performs ratehr long tunes (classical duo), so the ability to just let the tape roll s-to-speak is a virtue. I want to be able to record an hour of music straight, then deal with the computer later. I grew-up using DAT-s in the radio business, but am wondering if stand alone CD burner isnt the way to go nowadays.
I have been eyeing the Alesis Masterlink for its flexibilty, 24 bit CD's, ability to archive and master, and the internal drive is cool also. Another contender would be the Tacaam CDRW 2000.
For DATS I have looked at the Tascam decks.
I need something that has XLR analog inputs as well as digital (the XLR issue limits my possibilites).
Any ideas, opinions, or experiences relevant to my situation would be great.
p.s. I already have an external Yamaha CD burner attache to the iMac and the tiBook has an internal burner. Also, there is the price difference between DAT and Burner, both tfor the deck and the medium.
Thanks,
Chuck
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Fri 12 Apr 2002, 23:21
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Rookie
Group: Members
Posts: 46
Joined: 13-Dec 01
From: OXFORD
Member No.: 2,664
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Check out the FOSTEX VF160CD 16 track digital recorder with cd burner, also has ADAT light pipe for transfer to computer as well as scsi. Cheaper than Alesis, more flexible than DAT or CDR has built in fx and compression etc, so can do basic mixes and back up or mix to cd built in. I have one for location recording.( when i want a quick easy one!) IT has 2 XLR mic inputs with insert points and Phantom power . As well as another 6 line/mic inputs, all of which can be recorded at once. the quality is at least as good as cdr.probably better as it has reasonable converters and no jitter. It is capable of recording all 16 at once but requires an external AD converter in ADAT format to achieve the extra 8 inputs. ITs not totally state of the art, but its reliable, easy to use and d*amn
handy. I do live recordings using it and then port them into my mac for editing and mixdown. In the uk it retails for @£800 ish, which i guess makes it Aprrox 1200 dollars, but it may be less. Which has got to be less than a masterlink. I like the masterlink as a standalone mastering tool etc, but its not really a location recording device. All the DAT and CDR recorders will only record as a stereo track, which wont allow you to do any serious editing or mixing. happy hunting. max
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max woz ere
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