Thanks & Understood. At this point I am all in the box with respect to recording clips and improv sessions. The reasons I have become so specifically curious about bit rate is the following.leedsquietman wrote:Within the box is a term meaning mixing solely within the computer, using DAWS and/or software plugins only. Not routing to hardware mixers or hardware units such as Manley compressors or SSE desks etc.
Capturing audio signals with microphones is an art form of it;s own with a lot of dynamic range and possible problems to mess things up. vstis/softsynths etc. are either processed using wavetables or generated synthesis and much of the audio processing is controlled within the software, leaving it less prone to fluctuations compared to running it out into an amp and then micing it and recording it that way. Although there are times where this is desirable (if you get your mics positioned well, great pres, know how to engineer a little) but the quality of most vstis now and the extral controls gives more possibilities without the inconvenience of micing it all up, so it's not very widespread.
What I mean particularly are vocals, guitars, sax, etc to my ears, often sound a tad fuller and richer in 24 bit mode.
(a) General reason:
I hope to become a Live performer in more ways the one. I have been into improvisation for a good while now. About the last 10-12 years of the 30 total I have been playing. I started with floor controlled looping devices and progressively incorporated a V-Bass (midi synth module as I am by strictest definition an electric bassist) & VS1880 (multi track hardware recorder) into live improvisational performance. Every musical move I have made over the course of the last 4-5 months has been made with the exclusive purpose of forwarding my evolution in true quantum fashion as a musician. I have a added a decent laptop computer/external hardrive, a decent audio/midi interface & a decent 46 key midi controller. I am using Ableton Live 6.0 (of course), Reaktor 5 (don't know a damn thing about it yet) & Stylus RMX. To make a long story very short, it's like jamming with 100 times the capability I possessed last year at this time. And that's with the extremely small amount I already have come to somewhat understand about the new hard/soft ware.
(b) Specific Reason
One the absolute best developments over the course of the last year is meeting and teaming up with EM at http://www.whiterobotrecords.com/home.html
if you go/click on "musicbot", about half way down the page, there midst other treasure, lurk a few...well, I'll leave it up to you to determine what they are.
When we get together and "sketch" stuff via a virtual notebook approach to improv, he uses a basic G5 with a basic Pro Tools input and then masters this material via an Alesis Masterlink. I apologize as I don't know much about this rig (obviously) as it's not mine, but EM assures me the audio outcome, and my like of it, comes a great deal from the 24bit Pro Tools capability. It has a somewhat "warm" sound after all the normalized BS. I really don't know what this is due to but I am trying to get there because I really dig that analogesque warmth. One thing I will say is that damn Master Link is one of the slowest pieces of equipment on the planet. Certainly not built for those blokes like myself with an above average amount of ADD.