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Hi guys and girls,
Hope you're having a good week.
I think this is a pretty straightforward question.
I can understand that you would want to track a sweet sounding outboard compressor on a vocal or acoustic guitar, or get a more focused sound with an outboard EQ coming in.
The thing is, would you do this with plugins?
Would there be any advantage to setting up plugins and printing them into the recording on the way in, as opposed to just using them later on the recorded sound?
I can see how this might me good to tame transients on a bass for instance, but does it affect sound quality in a positive way as well?
Having said all that, do you ever set up plugins that way (when you're taking a break from the outboard gear)?
Thanks,
João

Comments

pcrecord Tue, 06/20/2017 - 05:20

JoaoSpin, post: 451043, member: 41554 wrote: I can see how this might me good to tame transients on a bass for instance, but does it affect sound quality in a positive way as well?
Having said all that, do you ever set up plugins that way (when you're taking a break from the outboard gear)?

There is 3 levels available now. The outboard gear, the dsp effects (done by some audio interfaces) and the Vst software plugins.
Both outboard and dsp are often good to print on the way in if you get the exact sound you want. DSP interfaces often let you print wet and dry signals so you can have both to work with.
As for the VST plugins, I see no reason why to commit on something you may want to work on at mix time... Unless your computer doesn't have the power to drive all the plugins you added to your project which may indicate that you used too many already ;)

audiokid Sat, 02/26/2022 - 10:51

When I've compared outboard compressors / limiters during printing (specifically 1176 or la2a) to a DAW, the tracks  sounded noticeably better.

When I compared the same approach using Apollo /UAD the tracks sounded noticeably worse.