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cheeseman
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 6:21 am Reply with quoteBack to top

yeah yamaha has a nice feel to their stuff. Its cheap but has a good quality feel about it. Safer bet than Behringer.
On the topic of Behringer and more over home recording , I think its the new punk. I don't mean that in the watered down dross angdrogenized crap that claims to be punk, but the fuck you very much establishment punk of yore. DIY recording is the male solo accoustic act of the decade and is a music movement in itself. People are thinking outside the square and doing amazing things by being inventive and making music using shit gear a creative choice. Its REAL punk! Engineers who know better will never like it because it defies the rules. But just because it defies the rules doesn't mean that it lacks merit. Some idiot savant is out there putting the lot of you to shame. Evolve or die!
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Link555
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 12:42 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Actually in some cases evolution seems to be killing us. Smile sorry couldn't resist

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SwitchbladeSound
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 1:41 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

DIY is definately coming to be more of a state of mind than it has in the past. I think using crappy gear is the best way to grow as an engineer. What better way to learn about signal flow than trouble shooting a buzz throughout your entire signal chain from your mic to your speakers? I think crappy beginner gear is what pushes pros to the top. Given, anybody who can talk to a Guitar Center salesman can call themselves an audio engineer, but without the drive to REALLY become an engineer, they will always be stuck in that "learning at Guitar Center" mentality. Behringer, hell yeah, they are cheaper components, and they will definately break down faster than say a Mackie, or Yamaha, but they are an affordable place to start, and you will be forced to learn about how to record a sound wel,l so you don't have to kill your mix by using crappy eqs to try to make it sound better.

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pkev
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 7:45 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Hi there,

New to forum so have been catching up on different topics.

I reckon it's very much each to their own view regarding any manufacturer.

I still think it's a fairly safe bet that there are quite a few Pro Studio's using Behringer gear. Even if it's only their DI boxes or Headphone Amps or whatever!. There are also Pro's using Behringer gear in `Live` applications. They might take the view that they use Behringer gear cos it actually does the job really well, instead of being a stop gap till they can afford something better.

As previous posts have suggested, Behringer gear can be good to cut your teeth into Audio production, but I would also argue that one could really learn how to get the best results from the gear and be able to produce some quality sounds.

I could also argue re reliability by saying that `none` of my Behringer gear has let me down and I have several products.

Personally, I have a small recording setup to pursue my musical and audio interests. It is probably worth remembering that It's the music that is important to me more than the actual audio stuff. I would never claim to being an audio engineer by any manner of means, my objective is to capture my musical ideas as best as I can with the tools I've got. I don't see the need to go and buy a top notch compressor.

Given that it's all a learning curve and I've been a musician for 30+ years, I am aware however of the quality to be had from different gear!

It's also worth considering that my outboard `crappy` gear has outlasted several PC crashes, OS, software / dongle and Plugin crashes.

Read any audio forum and I'll rest my case. I think the whole PC software, plugin thing is a minefield and it's getting worse cos it's sucking everyone and his granny in.

I'm inclined to take the view to a certain extent, that as far as equipment goes,

EQ is EQ, Reverb is Reverb, Compression is Compression, Gating is Gating

Someone who has the skillset / experience to apply this stuff can do it just as well with a waves EQ plug, JMeek compressor, Alesis Reverb and Behringer Gate.

Anyway, just a shout up for some behringer gear that I've found good

Cheers
pkev
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Kent L T
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 24, 2007 10:27 am Reply with quoteBack to top

The behringer stuff I have used I inherited and haven't liked any of it. The headphone amp well.. has no power. It can't drive the number of headphones it has Jacks for, can't even drive one set properly. The DI's well they work ok. The eq well I just disconnected it because it kept doing weird things to the sound randomly. Just my experiences with their stuff maybe others have different experiences.
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Spase
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 11:11 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Behringer is kind of hit and miss. Some of it really sucks, and some works ok... occasionally a piece might actually work somewhat well.

It can still be just fine for someone to learn on.
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JoeH
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 11:45 am Reply with quoteBack to top

I avoid Behringer simply for their unethical business practices, which are well documented and available to anyone who does a google search. (The now-infamous Sam Ash/Berhinger/Mackie lawsuits are a good place to start...)

The head of Behringer once bragged in a print interview that they did lots of reverse engineering to replicate other manufacturers products, to save $ and time in R&D. I simply don't need to buy stuff from the hardware equivalent of cracked software. Not only that, I'd be very embrassed to have any of their stuff for serious work here in my place of biz, for clients to see.

Having said all that, I'll sheepishly admit that I recently bought a dozen headphone amps for a click-track orchestra recording. For that, they worked just fine, and my only rationalization for the purchase is that nothing else with those specs was available at the time to do the job. They're safely put away in a box until the next time I ever need them. I don't plan on making any other Berhinger purchcases beyond that; there's simply too many other serious choices out there instead, regardless of the cost.

Of course, YMMV.

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Davedog
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 3:34 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

cheeseman wrote:
yeah yamaha has a nice feel to their stuff. Its cheap but has a good quality feel about it. Safer bet than Behringer.
On the topic of Behringer and more over home recording , I think its the new punk. I don't mean that in the watered down dross angdrogenized crap that claims to be punk, but the fuck you very much establishment punk of yore. DIY recording is the male solo accoustic act of the decade and is a music movement in itself. People are thinking outside the square and doing amazing things by being inventive and making music using shit gear a creative choice. Its REAL punk! Engineers who know better will never like it because it defies the rules. But just because it defies the rules doesn't mean that it lacks merit. Some idiot savant is out there putting the lot of you to shame. Evolve or die!



There's several points in this post that I feel need some response.


While I agree that home recording with cheap gear is perhaps the new wave, (yes, I understand about the whole 'less-is-more' scene thats current) as far as it being the 'new punk' or a movement based on antiestablishment mores, I couldnt disagree more. Yes, there is a segment of the recording community that strives to establish itself as a viable sales force , one of the sales points being DIY in nature or inventive low-fi recordings.....Most of this has been fostered out of necessity rather than a 'breaking of the rules' and while it shows incentive and most of all the desire to record anything with any gear available, you cannot tell me that given the monetary ability to 'move up' in gear quality that these very same people would not do so in a heartbeat.

This is not to suggest that even with a better set of toys that there wouldnt be 'off-the-edge' techniques attempted and applied liberally. A Neumann through a floor pedal of some sort is simply a better mousetrap than a Ber....er mic through the same thing. The results, in fact, probably more stunning and diverse.

It makes me glad to be a member of a community that is willing to forego any established set of 'rules' in order to participate in something that we all know drives us to insanity.

But to simply call it an antiestablishment movement is simply not reality.

And for those who have no experience in the past or do not study the past as a historic perspective on today,( these forays into the seemingly untapped space of what appears to be far-out experimentation with sonic boundarys), would do well to research this back to the 60's psychedelic explosion and see that its all been done before.

The only difference is that now, due to the relative inexpensive gear readily available to the average home recordist, its much more prevalent than it has been in the past.

But in all things, a dilution of the colors or the consistancy of anything is simply not going to stand the test of time. Not to say there isnt brilliant soundmaking going on this very moment with low-budget gear and surroundings.


To assume that "engineers that know better" will not like it because of some mythical set of rules shows weakness of the understanding of these very RULES. Any quality engineer knows the only 'rules' there are , are the ones established by the physical universe and the reproduction of sound and noise in this particular dimension we exist within. A real engineer easily sees ways around limitations within these sets of parameters in order to accomplish the task at hand, is willing to do so, and ,actually, most that I know, relish the idea that a session isnt going to be one of grinding out song after song using established criteria and technique.

Its statements like these that show me that this poster has NEVER worked with an accomplished engineer of any kind or he would know this.

Lets not mix our apples and grapefruits in this. Record company executives, A&R people, and certainly not management, are not the same as the engineer. While these other types may in fact have a prediliction towards some establishment bottomline and routine to make records, most engineers are in fact weird scientists that given the opportunity to go off the map in search of new territory will do so without much prompting.

Finally. Evolution is a multifacetted process. While I do agree that the model for record making and marketting is now broken and in need of a new beginning, artistically speaking, there is only the artists themselves to be held responsible for any new and improved facet of sound that may or may not titillate the general publics musical funnybone.


As far as 'idiot savants....I have some experience with these....its very rare that ANYONE of this true nature is able to operate in public or at any level of success due to the nature of their being. So while there may be brilliance being established in someones basement with all the lights out, the chances of this ever coming to light are few and far between and certainly not to the point of threatening the existance of the entire music producing community.

"Evolve or die??" Hardly. Grow and thrive....

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BobRogers
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 5:39 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Dave -

I agree with a lot of what you say. But I think that there is a good parallel between punk and the DIY movement. It seems to me that most of the impetus for American punk* was not a rejection of the social establishment as much as a a rejection of the established musical conventions of the early/mid 70's. Going to three chord - two minute songs was a reaction to the Carpenters or Captain & Tennille on one hand and the prog rockers on the other. Today all of the most financially successful pop music has converged on a few very successful formulas. All of these formulas are dependent on large modern digital studios. DIYers (like others) have rejected these formulas and sought another direction. If they are smart enough to keep their eye on the musical ball and keep from believing their recycled slogans they might do something. (How many times have I heard that mess?)

As for an idiot savant coming to the rescue. It won't be an idiot, it will have to be someone damned smart. Guys like Les Paul and George Martin who made it up as they went along (and made a lot of mistakes along the way) were very bright guys. Most people who start from scratch end up with scratch.


* Brit punk is another story altogether.
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PostPosted: Sat Sep 01, 2007 8:27 am Reply with quoteBack to top

What is cheap but safe?
Samson, some Alesis, Yamaha, some mackie... show me more Smile
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