I think you ought to look at the Boss BR series. I use a BR 1600 CD. 16
Tracks - so that's 16 mics -  256 virtual tracks and more microphone,
ambience, hall, reverb blah, blah, blah settings that you can shake a stick
at. It also allows you to produce professional grade CD's without the need
to move to another package. The 1600 has just dropped in price too.

To quote the american phrase....check it out.

Neil
-----Original Message-----
From: David Tayler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 23 September 2008 08:59
To: lute-cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Microphone


   I have nothing against the zoom, I think it is priced about right, the
   Fostex competes favorably with more expensive, professional gear.
   The Fostex also has headroom, you can add a pair of Senheisers or
   Schoeps to it, and viola! You have a versatile, professional,
   audiophile system.
   The zoom is maybe more convenient, but two mics, a stand a Fostex and
   some clips takes me ten minutes. If I shave five minutes from that--or
   seven, it's nice, but not worth the tradeoff in sound.
   Another way to look at it is, would you buy a lute just because the
   pegs worked well and you could save time tuning?
   Maybe.
   Then again, there may be something new that is better, there always is.
   dt
   At 07:49 PM 9/22/2008, you wrote:

     Dear David,

     Looking foward to hear about it.

     Actually, do you like the Zoom H2 recorder? The price is good.
     2008/9/20 David Tayler <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >

          tascam's stuff is not what it was.
          I will be at the AES show in a few weeks and I'll post a report
          of
          the good lute recording stuff,
          there may be a Fostex beater out there, or some new budget mics.
          Always look for a noise figure of 129.5 EIN in a preamp and A
          weighted 10-15 in a mic.
          It won't tell you about the sound, but if it is noisy you really
          can't use it for lute.
          The Sennheisers have realy the best noise management, but the
          Schoeps
          are not far beyond.
          There's some budget mics that have good noise figures, but the
          capsules are not good.
          The Studio Projects B1 has a good combo of a soft mylar/gold
          capsule
          and good electronics,
          I'll have more info after the show.
          dt
          To get on or off this list see list information at
          [2]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

   --

References

   1. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   2. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html




Reply via email to