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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Insight As To How Recording Studios Have Progressed With The Use Of Digital Mixing

By John Phenom


There are many ways to consider how recording studios have changed with the advent of digital audio workstations. From convenience to the basic methodology of the work, the DAW systems in place today have streamlined a process that used to be much more time consuming. At the same time, the DAW systems also create their own level of complexity where analog used to be pretty basic for engineers to master.

Analog formats were the standard for decades for artists in the 20th century. The work was captured on magnetic tape that was spliced and edited. In DAW formats such as Pro Tools, Cubase, Logic Pro and Maschine, you can go back in virtual time to erase, overlap, perform multi-tracking or create loops.

The DAW process is much more forgiving and versatile than tape when it comes to audio editing. When capturing sound on tape, typically tracks were put down, which then could be bounced onto subsequent tracks. This process compressed the sound onto one track. Unfortunately, the engineer then no longer had control of the separate track elements.

In DAW formats, each track stays separate and can be manipulated individually. You can patch in a lot easier than in analog, where actual splicing of a tape needs to occur for insertion of new material without re-recording. Timing can be exact on DAW formatting, where analog had to be physically manipulated on tape or entirely redone.

DAW's can save an artist or producer a lot of money when it comes to booking time in a studio. The speed and ease of use of these newer systems can make the process go much faster than what you might experience working in an analog system. The result is a shorter and more cost-effective period spent in the studio working alongside an engineer.

DAW formats also can last indefinitely in the virtual realm, provided the source file is safe in storage on a computer system. Analog tapes were always at risk of damage since they were vulnerable to physical damage. Air, water or heat could bring problems to the tape itself, and it could degrade over time, taking with it its recorded contents to be lost forever if copies were not made.

When you review how recording studios have changed with the advent of digital audio workstations, you can see the leaps and bounds by which technology has developed for artists. Taking the world of sound and using it either in a studio or at home means more options are available for many music producers. Sonic quality continues to develop to reach new heights.




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