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Manley Voice Box.

I am ready to commit up to $3000-$3500 to get a channel strip/combo that will really excel in getting the big, warm, present and defined vocal recording sound.

Would love to be able to get away with the tried and true Avalon VT737 . . . but wonder if the extra cost is worth going further up for the Millennia, Pendulum and Manley [and opinions between them] - How big a bang in further getting that big, warm, present, and defined pro vocal sound do the others deliver over the Avalon and each other?

P.S. Yes, plan and expect the boxes would be great with other instruments - acoustic guitar, bass, etc. also - but nailing that vocal, as close as possible with minimal need for further processing, is the goal.

P.S. Mics I use for vocals is the AT4050. Will likely add a CAD M9 or AEA or a Ribbon, but my philosophy and what I understand is that these units can make average makes great, providing great flexibility vs having just one $2-3 grand mic.

Comments

trock Sat, 12/04/2004 - 20:20

Hi War

i have the AT4050 mic also. i was in the same boat as you just a while ago and i almost got the 737sp.

instead i got an Avalon M5 Pre, and the 747sp and chained them. the comp on the 747 is the same as the 737 but the M5 is far better than the pre on the 737, and the EQ on the 747 is different, not sure if it is better or not.

i run this into either my 2480 and out an AUX to a TC M3000 or through an RME Fireface 800 to Cubase SX 3, where i have some WAVES or UAD-1 studio, and an AUX to the M3000

for acoustic and/or vocals i couldn't be happier.

if you want to check out someone's finished product with just a 737 and a 2480 with onboard effects check out this guy

http://www.chipsongs.com

hope this helps

anonymous Sun, 12/05/2004 - 09:41

trock wrote: Hi War

i have the AT4050 mic also. i was in the same boat as you just a while ago and i almost got the 737sp.

instead i got an Avalon M5 Pre, and the 747sp and chained them. the comp on the 747 is the same as the 737 but the M5 is far better than the pre on the 737, and the EQ on the 747 is different, not sure if it is better or not.

i run this into either my 2480 and out an AUX to a TC M3000 or through an RME Fireface 800 to Cubase SX 3, where i have some WAVES or UAD-1 studio, and an AUX to the M3000

for acoustic and/or vocals i couldn't be happier.

if you want to check out someone's finished product with just a 737 and a 2480 with onboard effects check out this guy

http://www.chipsongs.com

hope this helps

It helps in showing that you felt the 737/747 was not enough on its own to satisfy.

Have you ever had a chance to check out the PEndulum, Millennia, Vox Box or other next level strip?

KurtFoster Sun, 12/05/2004 - 14:47

There is a song I recorded with the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.nowherer…"]Millennia STT-1[/]="http://www.nowherer…"]Millennia STT-1[/] on the Reviews forum ... check it out!

I personally really like the Millennia .. Just the way it is built inspires confidence ... the build and feel of the controls is about as good as it gets ... even better than my MP2NV. I love the Millennia for acoustic guitar, vocals and especially on bass. The opto compressor is among the best of this type I have ever used .. and I think the compressor alone is worth price of the STT-1.

I haven't heard the Pendulum Quartet, but it is only fair to mention it sells for almost twice the price of the STT-1.

As far as the Avalon ... I think the Millennia beats it hands down ... I don't care for the high frequency eq section on the Avalon stuff ... it has always sound kind of "plastic like" to me .. The Millennia high freq section is much smoother sounding to my ears.

anonymous Sun, 12/05/2004 - 15:53

Kurt Foster wrote: There is a song I recorded with the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.nowherer…"]Millennia STT-1[/]="http://www.nowherer…"]Millennia STT-1[/] on the Reviews forum ... check it out!

I personally really like the Millennia .. Just the way it is built inspires confidence ... the build and feel of the controls is about as good as it gets ... even better than my MP2NV. I love the Millennia for acoustic guitar, vocals and especially on bass. The opto compressor is among the best of this type I have ever used .. and I think the compressor alone is worth price of the STT-1.

I haven't heard the Pendulum Quartet, but it is only fair to mention it sells for almost twice the price of the STT-1.

As far as the Avalon ... I think the Millennia beats it hands down ... I don't care for the high frequency eq section on the Avalon stuff ... it has always sound kind of "plastic like" to me .. The Millennia high freq section is much smoother sounding to my ears.

Yes, your clip really impressed me for how big and warm the sound was with little to no eq and processing [I believe there was little to none].

It's my understanding that the Pendulum Quartet II is over $4,000 list while the original Quarter is around $3,000 list.

HAve you ever heard the Vox Box?

P.S. Yes, I have ruled out the VT 737 as I believe all the others are another level up, but now its an issue of figuring out how the others differ in terms of performance and sonic quality and how easy it is to get such performance and sonic quality.

P.S. More Millennia Recordings, if you have them, pretty please :lol:

KurtFoster Sun, 12/05/2004 - 16:20

WARangel wrote: Yes, your clip really impressed me for how big and warm the sound was with little to no eq and processing [I believe there was little to none.

Thanks, this was done through cheap converters too! I used Alesis AI3 converters into an older version of Cubase, (Cubase VST 5.1).

No EQ or plugs were used ... the compression you hear is all from the STT-1. Listen to the solo ... that's a bass played an octave up with lots of squish from the comp (I was pulling 10dB out when tracking) ... notice the lack of breathing and pumping and how natural it sounds.

This is the only all Millennia clip I have ... I did this song soley as a demo for the Millennia.

Guest Mon, 12/06/2004 - 02:59

Kurt Foster wrote: I haven't heard the Pendulum Quartet, but it is only fair to mention it sells for almost twice the price of the STT-1.

Uhhh, no. The 'Quartet' sells for $2,650-... so unless LaGrou gave you one for $1,325 so you'd talk about it all the time, the Quartet is NOT almost twice the price of the STT-1.

WARangel wrote: It's my understanding that the Pendulum Quartet II is over $4,000 list while the original Quarter is around $3,000 list.

The Quartet lists for $3,250 but "streets" for $2,650... the Quartet II lists for $5,250 and "streets" for $4,500

WARangel wrote: HAve you ever heard the Vox Box?

Yes. I'm not a fan... but others are. I find it very washy and indistinct... but a whole lot of people like that. I found the STT-1 to be sterile, cold and boring... even after swapping the tube to a Telefunken tube [which I just find incredible... swapping the tube out on a brand new box to try to make is sound like something decent... but maybe that's just me]

The Quaretet and the Quartet II are two entirely different units... one does not replace the other. I'm not going to bother to do an extensive "compare and contrast" [I think I did one of those a while ago on one of the 'GearSlutz' forums if you want to do a search there]... the differences are indeed palpable... both are great, neither is better though one is far more comprehensive.

anonymous Mon, 12/06/2004 - 08:28

Fletcher wrote: [quote=Kurt Foster]I haven't heard the Pendulum Quartet, but it is only fair to mention it sells for almost twice the price of the STT-1.

Uhhh, no. The 'Quartet' sells for $2,650-... so unless LaGrou gave you one for $1,325 so you'd talk about it all the time, the Quartet is NOT almost twice the price of the STT-1.

WARangel wrote: It's my understanding that the Pendulum Quartet II is over $4,000 list while the original Quarter is around $3,000 list.

The Quartet lists for $3,250 but "streets" for $2,650... the Quartet II lists for $5,250 and "streets" for $4,500

WARangel wrote: HAve you ever heard the Vox Box?

Yes. I'm not a fan... but others are. I find it very washy and indistinct... but a whole lot of people like that. I found the STT-1 to be sterile, cold and boring... even after swapping the tube to a Telefunken tube [which I just find incredible... swapping the tube out on a brand new box to try to make is sound like something decent... but maybe that's just me]

The Quaretet and the Quartet II are two entirely different units... one does not replace the other. I'm not going to bother to do an extensive "compare and contrast" [I think I did one of those a while ago on one of the 'GearSlutz' forums if you want to do a search there]... the differences are indeed palpable... both are great, neither is better though one is far more comprehensive.

Okay, I will search on Gearslutz.

But in sum, are you saying that the Quartet does not have the sonic weaknesessed you find in the Vox Box and Origin, ie. is more defined and present than Vox Box and more "lively"/less sterile and musical than Origin?

KurtFoster Mon, 12/06/2004 - 16:15

Yes, I misspoke .. I was intending to speak of the Quartet II ... the "Fletcher" model .... and as noted it is almost twice the price of the STT-1. Sorry for the error ...

As far as "sterile and cold" ... don't take my word for it, listen to the clips I posted ... make up your own mind. Keep in mind, in most instances, gear dealers usually don't have much of anything good to say about product lines they don't carry ..

BTW, my criterea for chatting things up goes a lot further than getting a good price on something ... if this were the case, I would be telling you all how great the Presonus M80 is all the time ... you should see the offer they extended to me on the review unit I had ... none the less, I told them I wasn't interested and sent the unit back ..

Manufacturers often offer an "accomodation price" on review units to writers / reviewers. This price usually reflects the dealer cost, so essentially the manufacturers get what they would normally get for the unit and they don't have to bear the added expense of return shipping the unit (manufacturers pay the shipping costs both ways) and restocking it, only to have to sell it at a reduced price, as used. So it is a "win / win" convinence to the manufacturer as well as the reviewer ..

anonymous Mon, 12/06/2004 - 16:46

Umm...maybe a very stupid question, but here goes: how do you know what types of tube to exchange in your box ?

I have just gotten a Millennia NESQ -2. In fact so new that I haven't tried it yet.

But the idea of changing tubes to get a different sound or character is interesting !

I should maybe do a serach on this, but is there a guide on tubes somewhere ? what is considered good and what is bad ? or is it just to look at the price tag ?

k

KurtFoster Mon, 12/06/2004 - 17:20

You can get the correct Telefunkin tubes directly from Millennia. The STT-1 I received came with extra Telefunkin tubes but I never tried them. I've been meaning to try them out, just out of curiosity but to tell the truth, I have been very happy with the sound of the ORIGIN the way it came with the "stock" tubes ... I really don't see any necessity to change them.

I also don't think that Millennia thinks this is a necessary thing either, rather they do it as an accommodation to customers who want to experiment.

anonymous Mon, 12/06/2004 - 17:39

cool, thanx !

Seems a bit weird that they would put dodgy tubes in the units shipped, no ?

But can I use different tubes other than Telefunken ?? Is there some sort of the incredible hulk tubes ?

or is that just myth ?

Anyways, it would be nice to read up a bit on tube. Which ones people consider more "colourful" or "better" sounding...

anonymous Tue, 12/07/2004 - 07:38

Keep in mind, in most instances, gear dealers usually don't have much of anything good to say about product lines they don't carry ..

Sure, every opinion should be taken with a grain of salt. Keep in mind also, though, that some dealers...especially relatively small ones...oftentimes don't carry certain lines for a reason. As for Fletcher's ethics and bias specifically, keep in mind that he just said that he's "not a fan" of a product he does carry, and often has good things to say about products he doesn't. Also keep in mind that a lot of this is subjective, so it's not a case of Kurt being "right" and Fletcher being "wrong" or vice versa...the best way to determine if a piece of equipment is right for you is to try it out for yourself.

-Duardo

KurtFoster Tue, 12/07/2004 - 11:12

First, I never said anything about any particular persons ethics, Duardo made the link to Fletcher, not me .. Please do not attempt to place words in my mouth ... I can speak for myself. I did point out that some people (especially gear dealers) have an agenda. I don't profit or benefit in any way when I "talk about" a piece. I do not get free gear and I do not get paid to write reviews.

I find it interesting that it seems to be OK with Duardo when it is insinuated, " LaGrou gave you one for $1,325 so you'd talk about it all the time" (which is not true) but has a problem with my comment, "Keep in mind, in most instances, gear dealers usually don't have much of anything good to say about product lines they don't carry .." I leave it to all of you to decide which was the more innocuous of the two comments.

However, I do agree with Duardo on one thing here, .... don't take any one persons word for it because the best most of us can do is relate our own personal experiences. This is one reason why I try to post audio examples of the stuff I endorse ... and recently I have noticed that even some magazine reviews are beginning to do this as well.

anonymous Tue, 12/07/2004 - 11:43

First, I never said anything about any particular persons ethics, Duardo made the link to Fletcher, not me .. Please do not attempt to place words in my mouth ... I can speak for myself.

I know that you didn't say anything about ethics...but when you said what you said about dealers, wasn't that in response to Fletcher's post?

I find it interesting that it seems to be OK with Duardo when it is insinuated, " LaGrou gave you one for $1,325 so you'd talk about it all the time" (which is not true) but has a problem with my comment, "Keep in mind, in most instances, gear dealers usually don't have much of anything good to say about product lines they don't carry .."

Sorry, I missed that insinuation entirely...when I read it I just thought he was taking issue with the statement you made regarding the price of the two units. I don't think it was cool for him to reply you had ulterior motives either.

-Duardo

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