Skip to main content

Hey i looking at getting a mic preamp as my next purchase. I'm fairly new to recording so i don't know much. i was just wondering if anyone has used any of those art pres like the MPA GOld or the pro channel or if anyone has any suggestions for a pre under 500. I was also looking at the brick which seems to get really good reviews. i have PreSonus firepod with Cubase 4. so with a pre u would just go the mic into the pre then the pre straight into the firepod? the mics i have if it would help are 4 sm57,1 beta 52, AKG 200 preception condenser,2mxl 900 condenser. thanks

Comments

anonymous Sun, 01/14/2007 - 11:00

ART

here's my "home studio budget guy" 2 cents:

I've have an ART ProChannel which I think is pretty good. I got it because I figured it would be versitle for me, what with it having a pre, comp and eq, and it has turned out that way. I record vocals, mic guitar amp, plug bass directly into it, the compressor is nice, so I don't have any complaints. It is just one channel though, so if I get into wanting to record stereo, like an acoustic guitar, I'll have to do something else, maybe buy another one.
Before I got it I asked on the forum here and most people agreed that for the budget price it was worth owning.

jonyoung Mon, 01/15/2007 - 09:09

I own 3 Pro MPA's and have swapped the tubes out in all of them for higher quality NOS tubes. I have recut vocals that were originally done on Avalon 737sp's and API 2600 channel strips because the client liked the sound of a particular tube in one of the ART's. My next round of gear purchases will be high end pres, but for now the ART stuff is serving very well, and I'll keep them for a long time.

Davedog Mon, 01/15/2007 - 09:44

I can agree with this completely. While the MPA is certainly not the best micpre on the planet, it is, without a doubt, one of the best bargains. The sounds you can achieve with these far outweigh the miniscule amount of cash you have to plunk down. And, four years later, many many hours of use, and NEVER a problem. The tube swapping thing yields obvious results immediately, and there are upgrades available at a very decent price that puts these units into another ballpark of sound.

My favorite low-budget recomendation for a micpre.

The Pro VLA compressor is another that fills the same spot.

The rest of the line doesnt get even close.

jonyoung Mon, 01/15/2007 - 13:45

The tube in an MPA is a 12AX7, which is a family of tubes that include many variations on a theme. I put some Raytheon 60's vintage 12AX7's in one, the high end is smoother and more sense of air than with the stock Chinese or Russian tubes that were in it. Another unit has Westinghouse 12DF7's, also 60's vintage.....low gain and extremely low noise, very dark sounding tube, my favorite for vocals, also works for certain piano, acoustic guitar sounds. I think I got the last pair on the planet, very hard to find. The 3rd unit has Mullard 12AT7's, also a low gain model, a little hyped from the low mids to mids, great for anything that needs to cut through a busy mix, like BG vocals, piano, electric guitar amps, acoustic guitar, might also be a good choice for snare.

Sources I've used: http://www.vacuumtubes.com They have a great 12AX7 page with descriptions of design characteristics and intended uses of various flavors.

BNB Tubes, an ebay store.

Don't be afraid of used tubes either, especially the high end brands like Telefunken or Mullard. They're tested and always come with a guarantee from good sellers.

Have fun!

RemyRAD Mon, 01/15/2007 - 20:09

The Fire Pod I believe already has 8 decent microphone preamps built in? I really don't think the low-cost tube preamp will be much if any improvement over the Fire Pod's microphone preamps. Sure, it will give you a different sound but what do you really hope to gain by this? As the other poster indicated, his tube microphone preamp, had a built-in compressor and equalizer. Now you're talking about a device that would be far more advantageous for you. Being able to track with a compressor and/or equalizer offers up many more sonic possibilities. A way to control the texture and dynamic range before it hits your analog to digital converters.

My personal feelings are that I am a very practical engineer and I will record on virtually any kind of equipment you put before me. Even with equipment of a compromise nature, I will still produce a beautiful quality professional product. Microphone preamps don't get in my way and they don't change how I make my recordings, they only change my technique to work around whatever their inefficiencies might be.

I just don't really think there is any advantage to plugging in a microphone preamplifier to another microphone preamplifier. It's dumb, unless you have to for some specific reason? Oh? You want more warmth?? Change the microphone. Change the placement of the microphone. And there's your additional warmth. It doesn't really sound warm just because you're amplifying device happens to be. It will sound warm if you engineer it that way. Can you say proximity effect?

Staying warm
Ms. Remy Ann David

jonyoung Tue, 01/16/2007 - 12:43

It doesn't really sound warm just because you're amplifying device happens to be.

Remy, no disrespect intended here, but when I decided to swap tubes in my first ART preamp, I swapped one channel only, put up a mic, grabbed an acoustic guitar and layed down about a minute of playing through each channel. The tonality between the two tracks from different tubes was jaw dropping. I completely agree that much can bo done with mic choice and placement, but preamps of different designs and features are another category of tools for an engineer to utilise. I'm not familiar with the Fire Pod, but it would make sense for any decent quality interface to have a direct input that would bypass the built in pres.

anonymous Tue, 01/16/2007 - 15:48

RemyRAD wrote: The Fire Pod I believe already has 8 decent microphone preamps built in? I really don't think the low-cost tube preamp will be much if any improvement over the Fire Pod's microphone preamps.

Are these actually better than the ProjectMix or Mbox 2 preamplifiers?

Or would you say they're all about the same?

Thanks!

RemyRAD Tue, 01/16/2007 - 22:46

Mickey_C, although I have over 36 years in the business, I've not been able to compare as many pieces of equipment is I would like to.

None of us want our creativity to be impeded by our equipment.

Some people agonize and struggle trying to find just the right equation of equipment selections. I have heard some people have had issues with the sound quality of some of the M-Audio products? I usually just chalk that up to operator error. I'll make good recordings regardless of how bad the microphone preamp might be.

I've never heard anything bad, not once, about the Presonus products of microphone preamps? I actually just borrowed a friends Presonus DIGIMAX 8 Channel microphone preamp/limiters with analog, ADAT light pipe and SPDIF/AES Digital outputs to evaluate against a classic API 312 microphone preamp. I'll let you know in a later post what my observations are.

So if it's basically something you feel is truly substandard technically and it is interfering with your ability to record something, I would become proficient first with my current toolset before moving on to more sophisticated devices? I would be more inclined to purchasing larger selection of microphones before purchasing a larger selection of preamps.

Not a sermon, just a thought.
Ms. Remy Ann David

Cucco Wed, 01/17/2007 - 07:39

Davedog wrote: I can agree with this completely. While the MPA is certainly not the best micpre on the planet, it is, without a doubt, one of the best bargains. The sounds you can achieve with these far outweigh the miniscule amount of cash you have to plunk down. And, four years later, many many hours of use, and NEVER a problem. The tube swapping thing yields obvious results immediately, and there are upgrades available at a very decent price that puts these units into another ballpark of sound.

My favorite low-budget recomendation for a micpre.

The Pro VLA compressor is another that fills the same spot.

The rest of the line doesnt get even close.

Trust the DAWG my friends...

The ART stuff is actually pretty damn good stuff. Here's the rub - their circuit layouts are conceptually quite good. Their parts are acceptable. Their tubes...ehh...

Replace the tubes in the ART stuff and transform it forever. Replace a few of the opamps (the right ones) and turn it into a beast! I have a ProVLA which I hot rodded by replacing the standard tubes with matched Mullards. I also replaced the stock OpAmps with Burr Brown and Analog Devices (All told, a $80 upgrade and 2 hours of soldering). I now use it in my mastering chain along side a Manley VariMu. Truthfully, the Manley gets more use, but the ART isn't that far behind. It sounds great. The ONLY reason it doesn't get more signal through it is because the knobs aren't as precise (that's another upgrade for another time with another $200).

Moral of the story, I've used plenty of ART gear in the past and as Dave says - it's not the cream of the crop, it certainly isn't that far off and for the pitance that you pay for it....it's a no-brainer!

Cucco Thu, 01/18/2007 - 19:52

Digikey. They sold them per piece versus several places that wanted to sell them per 100 or more pieces.

I had to go with a modular/surface mount version (pins spread instead of pins down) and a socket adapter. It was a few extra solder points, but if I ever want to change chips, it's a tad easier this way.

CoyoteTrax Sun, 01/21/2007 - 12:36

I was just reading this (I know, I know...3 days later) and want to shout out a +1 on the BNB Tubes ebay store jonyoung mentioned. I've scored some absolute bargains there several times and got quality tubes no doubt. Good service and fast shipping.

For AT7's do yourself a favor and find some NOS philips 12AT7's.

The pro vla - outstanding little compressor with nice color.

The pro mpa gold pre's - same thing - very useful if you roll in some nice tubes.

That's all I had to say. As you were.

BTW, sometimes just plugging in to your firepods pre's can yield fantastic results. With 4 different flavors of pre's to chose from, lately I've been getting outstanding results from just the pre's on my fw1814. Go figure. And that's with a simple AT3035.

anonymous Fri, 01/23/2009 - 09:33

RemyRAD wrote:
I just don't really think there is any advantage to plugging in a microphone preamplifier to another microphone preamplifier. It's dumb, unless you have to for some specific reason?

Staying warm
Ms. Remy Ann David

I realize this thread is old, but I, too, have been looking into the ART MPA line (digital) for an add on to my Presonus Firebox.

You aren't plugging a preamp into a preamp, you're plugging the ART preamp into the line-in, which bypasses the internal preamps of the Presonus. Or, in my case w/ the Digital MPA, I would use the SPDIF. Then you sync both sets of preamps to the same clock source.

For the Firebox, you can have 6 preamps running simultaneously (2 built in, 2 line in, 2 digital)...Nice thing about the ART MPA series, you can also stick a compressor in the inserts.

I realize he has the larger Presonus w/ the 8 internal pre's, but just thought I'd give the heads up in case anyone thinks they need a larger setup, when you can get 6 simultaneous tracks out of a Firebox.

lostindundee Fri, 06/26/2009 - 11:05

EricUndead wrote: All the vocals [[url=http://[/URL]="http://myspace.com/…"]here[/]="http://myspace.com/…"]here[/] were recorded with an Art MPA Gold thru an FP10. Of course myspace will have hammered the dynamics and we still haven't got any of it mastered, but you get the idea. My interface crapped out and I have yet to get a replacement. Hope you find this useful.

Sounds good to me.

Was this done with the stock tubes in the ART?

I'm glad I ordered one now.

LiD

dickiefunk Sun, 08/09/2009 - 08:12

I've used or owned :-

Behringer mixer (pres)
Focusrite Trakmaster
Studio Projects VTB1
SPL Goldmike
M-Audio DMP3
M-Audio Tampa
ART MPA Gold (with NOS Telefunken and GE tubes)
Focusrite ISA One

The ART MPA Gold was by far the noisiest of these preamps but I actually quite liked it's tone!
My favorite is the Focusrite ISA One. This has the smoothest and cleanest sound out of all of these preamps.

ART has recently released the PRO MPA II which has lower noise, better gain staging etc.

If I were looking for a preamp under $500 these would be top of my list to check out :-

True Systems P-Solo
Golden Age Projects PRE-73
Black Lion Auteur

x

User login