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I will be working on a live recording done on Cubase (@48k -24 bit) with a Mutu sound card (24 I/O). I did not record it.

I can book 3 different studios and either mix it in Pro Tools HD2 or HD3 or SSL. The price difference is minimal. I would go for the SSL.
My plan is to connect the sound card output to the tape in of the SSL and use SSL and outboard gear to process the mix and use automation from cubase.

I just don’t know, if having all 24 tracks in digital already, I should rather stay there, import everything in Pro Tools and mix there.

I would like to hear others opinion on it

Ciao

MMH

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Comments

anonymous Fri, 07/01/2005 - 06:49

Midlandmorgan is right - whichever sounds better for you...
But it's not a bad aidea to keep in mind a few technical details...

- If you'd like to toss tracks to 2" remember that track 24 is usually
for the time-code, some engineers don't use track 23 for avoiding
screwing up the mentioned time-code. So, you have 22 tracks left.
If you need more - or go ProTools, or you can sync two tapes (but
that's a pain in you know what).
- SSLs sound great. One thing is to remember though while mixing
with it - recalling is hassle and such a waist of time. May cost you
if you are not careful.

sheet Fri, 07/01/2005 - 09:05

Well, I think that the phrase SSLs sound great is kind of misleading.

Straight out of the factory, some SSL's were great, some were not. Then you have to realize which SSL it is and if it has been properly maintained. So a blanket statement is dangerous.

Many big eared, highly paid engineers say that they cannot hear a difference in ITB or OTB mixes once mastered and manufactured. It is all in the engineer. In many cases, when engineers base the records sonic success on technology or topology, then they should hang it up. Too many excellent records were made on tape and then ADATs.

If you are going to use the automation in Cubase, then it really doesn't matter anyway. Anything that you think you're gaining by another D/A and then A/D stage by the SSL (and then all of the other A/D and D/A processes in the outboard DSP) will be moot and eclipsed by the decimation in Cubase.