Just realize that Chris Lord Alge has an assistant who goes into the DAW to set the outputs of Pro Tools to conform to his 48 input SSL. I DON’t believe that a template would do it unless you start the project with the outputs already assigned.
@@LaurenPassarelli... my background is in the studio... technical. Back in the early 90s I worked in a studio that had another console designed by Dave Deardon in his former company, DDA (Deardon Davies Associates). It was the AMR 24... a split console with 36 inputs and a 24 buss/monitor section, so it was a LONG console... but it was also a top notch performer. When I realized that Audient was another company by Dave Deardon, I knew that whatever they put out would be well-designed and a very good value for the money. It's nice to see your setup and get what you're doing. There is something about mixing through a console (It's actually the buss structure and what it does to the overall mix) that cannot be readily duplicated in the box. The hybrid studio is really the best way to go for music. Cut tracks through a console into the DAW, then edit and get things ready in the DAW, then run it through a console, printing the mix back to the DAW or... if you're lucky... run it to 2 track tape as well for that finishing sheen.
I have an SSL XL-Desk. I keep telling myself I'll make a template, but no two projects are very much the same, so I've not bothered. I'm an amateur who can just do a single song to the end, no matter how long it takes, and I never come back to them again, so that's not too big a deal. Though, if I wanted to, the SSL has outputs for all tracks and busses, so you can just record them all out as is. Then, later, just bring them all in with everything flat, just set panning, and play with it from there. To me, I'm trying to use the DAW as little as possible, basically a digital tape deck. I'm not quite there, since I live in an apartment so I use BFD3 for drums. Otherwise, I don't use any plugins. I enjoy that way of working. It's there if I need it, but I try not to. The ASP has some nice features that the SSL doesn't have, and vice versa I guess. I seriously looked as the ASP at the time, but space was a major issue for me, and the SSL packs a lot of functionality into a pretty small space. Any one you pick is some sort of compromise unless you can afford a full on large format desk. But the immediacy of working on a console is just miles better than working in the DAW. I don't stare at wave forms anymore. It's really increased my 'song memory' because I don't have those visual queues of wave forms and markers and tracks in front of me. I really now have learn the song. And it helps avoid 'analysis paralysis', because you have a limited amount of hardware and channels. I definitely get the frustration thing. There will be days where you are sitting there scratching your head thinking, WHY am I not hearing anything on this track? It's almost always pilot error, and I'm getting better at it. But I still have those. Between the DAW and its I/O routing, the patch bay (some of it normalled and some not), the console and it's routing and gain stages and multiple channel inputs, the outboard gear, the patching in of instruments and mics, etc... There's a lot of flow there.
Absolutely spot on. I have ua apollos and there is the "console" virtual mixer that complicates things too. I've been using the mic inputs from when I first got them. To simplify now, I should probably make then all line inputs. Sometimes there's no sound because of the pilot error on that, too. Wow, the SSL XL-Desk looks great! I was using Logic as a tape recorder for years. I think it would have been more fun for everyone if the computer WAS the console. I wonder if I will ever take the plunge and make the 4816 the center of the only setup... I can still be all in the box with speakers or on the mixer side with other speakers. It's cool, and fun, and wonky, and strange, and great, and disorienting, and interesting. Ha! It was definitely the virtual computer side of things confusing me for awhile. I have named the I/O labels but they're numbered differently when mono vs stereo and the names don't always show. I got spoiled having a stereo signal be on one fader in the box. Wot, I have to use two analog faders for stereo?! Oh yes. Huh. 😂 I agree, a template doesn't work for every song. My patch bay is still nomalled to the outboard gear for the I/O plugin. Maybe now I'd like my DAW outs to be normalled to the 4816 inputs so I don't have to patch them. It's great that the 16 adat outs are plugged directly to the 4816. But I have the MS-16 1 inch tape machine going to the desk too. With 4816 inserts in the patch bays I can patch outboard gear to the 4816 or use the outboard gear in the box with the I/O. I was recording to tape while playing to Logic tracks, flying in the taped tracks, and lining them up to the logic project. Nice to have real tape saturation on 12 or less tracks of drums. A friend mentioned because of the playback head I could even send Logic tracks to the tape deck and input them back into new Logic tracks in real time. I wasn't sure it would work with all I have going on in this setup. But it does! I had cranked up the midrange and high end on a shaker, sent it to the desk to the tape machine and back to print on a new track in Logic and the wave form had less transients. Of course you could hear it worked but it was cool to conform it visually. Lately I have been closing my eyes to adjust mix to dry or EQ moves or parallel processing, to listen more than watch. For decades it was: just listen. It is cool to see the sonic shape on an EQ on the master fader. I guess we all did it by ear and depended on the mastering engineer to trim the fat. I like seeing why the mix is over cooked. So I'm torn to reset stuff up or get a new furniture desk to hold the 4816. At first you crave more gear, then you realize you've complicated your life tremendously, then you dig it again, and then you realize you have lots of options and it's all good. Totally fun to be us!
I wish they would’ve added DB25 connectors for the new HE model. Much cleaner set up. Such a nice board overall thanks for making this video. We need more content for this board.
Thank you for the video, it made me smile and feel good! I can see the fun and the passion, you have playing with the music and make it sound really good. 😍😍
Great relaxed video! What fun to have this console. We have an SSL X-desk at my school, and I love using it with logic-Yes the routing issues are a little hassle, but oh the sound and feel of a console!
I know what you're sayin'. I used to have a Studiomaster Trackmix 32 with 4 ADAT machines and before that a half inch eight track tape recorder: Tascam 38.ruclips.net/video/rpFo8XGlDLw/видео.html ruclips.net/video/7EMjovgNki0/видео.html
@@ericsample9818 It's been a blast, like time traveling back to my 1/2 inch eight track days on the Tascam 38. This MS-16 looks similar to the 38 and I liked that it could be in a rack. It works great. Bought off reverb. Drums and anything with major transients really take to tape well. I never had any trouble with my 38 and I haven't had trouble with this MS-16. It's fun to play with. ruclips.net/p/PL1HcwONdBtUUJNUybNHS-bU00-LdZ6Sto
I was starting to think an Apollo 16 would be betta to avoid the converter delay between my two apollo eights. BUT, the new apollo sixteens don't have adat in and out. SO what you gain you also lose. Here in the set up I have there are 16 in and out analog and 16 in and out digitally. SO when it works which is often especially if I just offset one machine once in awhile with a delay plugin I have 32 channels in and out.
@@LaurenPassarelli It is wonderful. Beyond my expectations..... the functionality, design, controls, build quality and finish quality. I will only use it occasionally - to feed my DAW (Reaper) or to mix. It is a lot of fun.
@@teashea1 Can you even believe how quiet the noise floor is!? It floored me. Everything sounds more pro right away. And I’m told those quiet Audient pres are in every interface and mixer they make. I could have gotten whisper quiet for a whole lot less money! Yes, the fun quotient is worth every penny. Congratulations!!
@@LaurenPassarelli Yes. The Audient preamplifiers are the best that exist in any console or audio interface. They are extraordinary. Audient uses these pre amplifiers in all of their equipment. The console is so much fun - I agree with you Lauren. How do you use yours most? Tracking or mixing?
@@teashea1 I've been using it with my 16 tk 1 inch Tascam MS-16 in a rack. I love that I don't have to parse the tracks to get to the console. I have sent 32 tracks from Logic but I hate having to parse each song. Have you put the mixer as the center piece of your studio? I still have two setups: my Logic system, and the tape system with separate monitors opposite each other. Maybe if I bought a different desk and made the console the only way to work, I could keep a template with the outs all ready. I like the different ways to work though. I also like my desk. You can see the other setup in this video: ruclips.net/video/afGIGvCde8Q/видео.html I haven't mixed a song through the mixer yet. Just playing around. But I will. I'd like to track a song and mix it just on the 1 inch and mix on the 4816. I recorded the guitars, voice and drums to "Seasonal Blues" onto the tape machine then dumped everything to Logic to add more tracks and mix. ruclips.net/p/PL1HcwONdBtUUJNUybNHS-bU00-LdZ6Sto
So cool. I'm looking at getting an ASP4816-HE for my studio rather than the digital mixer I have. How do you like the mic pres and the EQ? That's a big draw for me, quality pres and EQ. Not that the Presonus StudioLive doesn't also sound nice, but the thought of beautiful analogue channel strips is so appealing.
It's beautifully clean & quiet. These pres are in every Audient interface and mixer. The hush is divine, the noise floor extremely low. I like the EQ. What sold me was no maintenance on an analog desk, no external power supply, super quiet, small size, with tons of connections and possibilities. Turns out it's a popular size, SSL, Neve & API have one, all much more expensive. I got this used. It's amazing.
I'm amazed at the low noise floor. The hush of a semi pro board is really stunning. These mic pres are in every interface Audient makes. Pretty amazing. The sound is clear, clean, professional, detailed, and articulate. I wanted a console with a built in power supply that didn't take up too much space, or cost a ton. I bought it used and I love it.
@@preciseaudioblog definitely. For years I thought I’d get a Toft or Trident. And maybe I’d prefer their color. The 4816 has so many connection options and the direct outs plus being able to have the tape deck and Logic connected at the same time was cool.
Reverb.com. Came from a gentleman in Florida who had it serviced before selling to make sure all was working. Heads were in great shape etc. I have written to Tascam to say there would be interest in resurrecting tape machines. Just at Berklee College of Music alone where I teach there would be hundreds of sales. Then the price of tape would come down. Chris Mara is doing his share at Welcome to 1979. Tape machines look cool. They're fun. I get the tape at www.atrtape.com/
@@LaurenPassarelli Lauren, there are dozens and dozens of excellent tutorial videos here on the wide range of Reaper abilities. Kenny Goioa is very good at explaining things. Unlike other DAW's, Reaper lets you adapt it (pretty easily) to the way you want to work.
👍🎸Ear Candy 🍬
A beautiful private studio with professional-grade equipment.
Im incorporating an Topaz 24/48 inline. Love it! No tape yet, hybrid.
Fabulous!
Just realize that Chris Lord Alge has an assistant who goes into the DAW to set the outputs of Pro Tools to conform to his 48 input SSL. I DON’t believe that a template would do it unless you start the project with the outputs already assigned.
Exactly.
@@LaurenPassarelli... my background is in the studio... technical. Back in the early 90s I worked in a studio that had another console designed by Dave Deardon in his former company, DDA (Deardon Davies Associates). It was the AMR 24... a split console with 36 inputs and a 24 buss/monitor section, so it was a LONG console... but it was also a top notch performer. When I realized that Audient was another company by Dave Deardon, I knew that whatever they put out would be well-designed and a very good value for the money. It's nice to see your setup and get what you're doing. There is something about mixing through a console (It's actually the buss structure and what it does to the overall mix) that cannot be readily duplicated in the box. The hybrid studio is really the best way to go for music. Cut tracks through a console into the DAW, then edit and get things ready in the DAW, then run it through a console, printing the mix back to the DAW or... if you're lucky... run it to 2 track tape as well for that finishing sheen.
Looks like you're having a great time. Love it.
Great video! I learned a lot and I really like this console!
I needed this video. ❤
Sweet. I need more videos about this console. What should we investigate next?
My kind of music. Kif music Lauren
great buy Lauren ! glad you're having fun with it ! Best, Sylvain
‘Elloooo, Sylvain! How’s by you?
I have an SSL XL-Desk. I keep telling myself I'll make a template, but no two projects are very much the same, so I've not bothered. I'm an amateur who can just do a single song to the end, no matter how long it takes, and I never come back to them again, so that's not too big a deal. Though, if I wanted to, the SSL has outputs for all tracks and busses, so you can just record them all out as is. Then, later, just bring them all in with everything flat, just set panning, and play with it from there.
To me, I'm trying to use the DAW as little as possible, basically a digital tape deck. I'm not quite there, since I live in an apartment so I use BFD3 for drums. Otherwise, I don't use any plugins. I enjoy that way of working. It's there if I need it, but I try not to.
The ASP has some nice features that the SSL doesn't have, and vice versa I guess. I seriously looked as the ASP at the time, but space was a major issue for me, and the SSL packs a lot of functionality into a pretty small space. Any one you pick is some sort of compromise unless you can afford a full on large format desk. But the immediacy of working on a console is just miles better than working in the DAW. I don't stare at wave forms anymore. It's really increased my 'song memory' because I don't have those visual queues of wave forms and markers and tracks in front of me. I really now have learn the song. And it helps avoid 'analysis paralysis', because you have a limited amount of hardware and channels.
I definitely get the frustration thing. There will be days where you are sitting there scratching your head thinking, WHY am I not hearing anything on this track? It's almost always pilot error, and I'm getting better at it. But I still have those. Between the DAW and its I/O routing, the patch bay (some of it normalled and some not), the console and it's routing and gain stages and multiple channel inputs, the outboard gear, the patching in of instruments and mics, etc... There's a lot of flow there.
Absolutely spot on. I have ua apollos and there is the "console" virtual mixer that complicates things too. I've been using the mic inputs from when I first got them. To simplify now, I should probably make then all line inputs. Sometimes there's no sound because of the pilot error on that, too.
Wow, the SSL XL-Desk looks great!
I was using Logic as a tape recorder for years. I think it would have been more fun for everyone if the computer WAS the console.
I wonder if I will ever take the plunge and make the 4816 the center of the only setup... I can still be all in the box with speakers or on the mixer side with other speakers. It's cool, and fun, and wonky, and strange, and great, and disorienting, and interesting. Ha!
It was definitely the virtual computer side of things confusing me for awhile. I have named the I/O labels but they're numbered differently when mono vs stereo and the names don't always show.
I got spoiled having a stereo signal be on one fader in the box. Wot, I have to use two analog faders for stereo?! Oh yes. Huh. 😂
I agree, a template doesn't work for every song. My patch bay is still nomalled to the outboard gear for the I/O plugin. Maybe now I'd like my DAW outs to be normalled to the 4816 inputs so I don't have to patch them. It's great that the 16 adat outs are plugged directly to the 4816. But I have the MS-16 1 inch tape machine going to the desk too. With 4816 inserts in the patch bays I can patch outboard gear to the 4816 or use the outboard gear in the box with the I/O.
I was recording to tape while playing to Logic tracks, flying in the taped tracks, and lining them up to the logic project. Nice to have real tape saturation on 12 or less tracks of drums. A friend mentioned because of the playback head I could even send Logic tracks to the tape deck and input them back into new Logic tracks in real time. I wasn't sure it would work with all I have going on in this setup. But it does! I had cranked up the midrange and high end on a shaker, sent it to the desk to the tape machine and back to print on a new track in Logic and the wave form had less transients. Of course you could hear it worked but it was cool to conform it visually.
Lately I have been closing my eyes to adjust mix to dry or EQ moves or parallel processing, to listen more than watch. For decades it was: just listen. It is cool to see the sonic shape on an EQ on the master fader. I guess we all did it by ear and depended on the mastering engineer to trim the fat. I like seeing why the mix is over cooked. So I'm torn to reset stuff up or get a new furniture desk to hold the 4816.
At first you crave more gear, then you realize you've complicated your life tremendously, then you dig it again, and then you realize you have lots of options and it's all good. Totally fun to be us!
That's an awesome setup! Stevie Wonder as the white rabbit that leads you down the rabbit hole to Wonderland.
Lovely setup and music. We've got an Audient 4816 as well, love it.
Thank you.
That’s so cool you have the 4816 too. It’s pretty crazy all the things it can do. I’d love to talk with you more about that.
Cool console, sounds great.
Old style recording ! Good for lots of inputs !
Nice track 😎
ruclips.net/p/PL1HcwONdBtUUJNUybNHS-bU00-LdZ6Sto&si=0fKd0tMuqknwoVSA
A few steps before
I wish they would’ve added DB25 connectors for the new HE model. Much cleaner set up. Such a nice board overall thanks for making this video. We need more content for this board.
What are you wondering about the 4816? Maybe I have some thoughts
Hey Lauren pardon the delayed response. I was wondering if you could show us the wiring for the your studio?
Thank you for the video, it made me smile and feel good! I can see the fun and the passion, you have playing with the music and make it sound really good. 😍😍
Ah, great! Let’s keep on with the fun then. It’s a blast to be us. 😎
Great relaxed video! What fun to have this console. We have an SSL X-desk at my school, and I love using it with logic-Yes the routing issues are a little hassle, but oh the sound and feel of a console!
I know what you're sayin'. I used to have a Studiomaster Trackmix 32 with 4 ADAT machines and before that a half inch eight track tape recorder: Tascam 38.ruclips.net/video/rpFo8XGlDLw/видео.html ruclips.net/video/7EMjovgNki0/видео.html
@@LaurenPassarelli You have ALL done the gear! I really love the idea of tape! Is that working well? Is it pretty reliable?
@@ericsample9818 It's been a blast, like time traveling back to my 1/2 inch eight track days on the Tascam 38. This MS-16 looks similar to the 38 and I liked that it could be in a rack. It works great. Bought off reverb. Drums and anything with major transients really take to tape well. I never had any trouble with my 38 and I haven't had trouble with this MS-16. It's fun to play with. ruclips.net/p/PL1HcwONdBtUUJNUybNHS-bU00-LdZ6Sto
I was starting to think an Apollo 16 would be betta to avoid the converter delay between my two apollo eights. BUT, the new apollo sixteens don't have adat in and out. SO what you gain you also lose. Here in the set up I have there are 16 in and out analog and 16 in and out digitally. SO when it works which is often especially if I just offset one machine once in awhile with a delay plugin I have 32 channels in and out.
Nice easy and relaxed video ---- My 4816SE will be delivered in three days --- I am looking forward to sometimes doing thing outside the box.
How's yer desk? (4816SE) Will you be using it with a stand alone recorder, tape, digital 2 tk?
@@LaurenPassarelli It is wonderful. Beyond my expectations..... the functionality, design, controls, build quality and finish quality. I will only use it occasionally - to feed my DAW (Reaper) or to mix. It is a lot of fun.
@@teashea1 Can you even believe how quiet the noise floor is!? It floored me. Everything sounds more pro right away. And I’m told those quiet Audient pres are in every interface and mixer they make. I could have gotten whisper quiet for a whole lot less money! Yes, the fun quotient is worth every penny. Congratulations!!
@@LaurenPassarelli Yes. The Audient preamplifiers are the best that exist in any console or audio interface. They are extraordinary. Audient uses these pre amplifiers in all of their equipment. The console is so much fun - I agree with you Lauren.
How do you use yours most? Tracking or mixing?
@@teashea1 I've been using it with my 16 tk 1 inch Tascam MS-16 in a rack. I love that I don't have to parse the tracks to get to the console. I have sent 32 tracks from Logic but I hate having to parse each song. Have you put the mixer as the center piece of your studio? I still have two setups: my Logic system, and the tape system with separate monitors opposite each other. Maybe if I bought a different desk and made the console the only way to work, I could keep a template with the outs all ready. I like the different ways to work though. I also like my desk. You can see the other setup in this video: ruclips.net/video/afGIGvCde8Q/видео.html I haven't mixed a song through the mixer yet. Just playing around. But I will. I'd like to track a song and mix it just on the 1 inch and mix on the 4816. I recorded the guitars, voice and drums to "Seasonal Blues" onto the tape machine then dumped everything to Logic to add more tracks and mix. ruclips.net/p/PL1HcwONdBtUUJNUybNHS-bU00-LdZ6Sto
So cool. I'm looking at getting an ASP4816-HE for my studio rather than the digital mixer I have. How do you like the mic pres and the EQ? That's a big draw for me, quality pres and EQ. Not that the Presonus StudioLive doesn't also sound nice, but the thought of beautiful analogue channel strips is so appealing.
It's beautifully clean & quiet. These pres are in every Audient interface and mixer. The hush is divine, the noise floor extremely low. I like the EQ. What sold me was no maintenance on an analog desk, no external power supply, super quiet, small size, with tons of connections and possibilities. Turns out it's a popular size, SSL, Neve & API have one, all much more expensive. I got this used. It's amazing.
@@LaurenPassarelli Thanks. That's helpful.
Hi! How does this console sound for your ears?
I'm amazed at the low noise floor. The hush of a semi pro board is really stunning. These mic pres are in every interface Audient makes. Pretty amazing. The sound is clear, clean, professional, detailed, and articulate. I wanted a console with a built in power supply that didn't take up too much space, or cost a ton. I bought it used and I love it.
@@LaurenPassarelli That’s amazing. Did you consider getting the Toft or the Api The Box before getting the Audient?
@@preciseaudioblog definitely. For years I thought I’d get a Toft or Trident. And maybe I’d prefer their color. The 4816 has so many connection options and the direct outs plus being able to have the tape deck and Logic connected at the same time was cool.
Its silly, but i dont Feel like im producing music unless there's faders in front of me
I get it. It feels more fun to have 'em. Fun is a main ingredient. Ta!
Where did you get the tape deck?
Reverb.com. Came from a gentleman in Florida who had it serviced before selling to make sure all was working. Heads were in great shape etc. I have written to Tascam to say there would be interest in resurrecting tape machines. Just at Berklee College of Music alone where I teach there would be hundreds of sales. Then the price of tape would come down. Chris Mara is doing his share at Welcome to 1979. Tape machines look cool. They're fun. I get the tape at www.atrtape.com/
@@LaurenPassarelli I use a mci-jh-110 for mix downs
The only down side is the tape is $
If you would use Reaper instead of Logic, it would be much easier to work with the console. Reaper is much more flexible and customizable.
Reaper would allow a global routing?
@@LaurenPassarelli Lauren, there are dozens and dozens of excellent tutorial videos here on the wide range of Reaper abilities. Kenny Goioa is very good at explaining things. Unlike other DAW's, Reaper lets you adapt it (pretty easily) to the way you want to work.
@@teashea1 I loooove Logic. I use a lot of the sounds in it since I compose so much. Been using Logic since 2005.