Reacting to ESPEN KRAFT (13 Ways To Sound Like The 80s)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024
  • ➡️ Learn 80s Music Production
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    I react to the inimitable Espen Kraft. Specifically his "13 Ways To Sound Like The 80s" video. While eating popcorn, drinking coffee, and solving a Rubik's Cube. It was a fun night in.
    Espen's video: • 13 Ways To Sound Like ...

Комментарии • 184

  • @corelur
    @corelur 2 месяца назад +27

    I'm glad you are back! You're my favorite music youtuber. I learn more about music on this channel than any other.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      @@corelur thank you so much! That’s awesome to hear and incredibly kind 🙏🙏🙏

  • @StefanTravis
    @StefanTravis Месяц назад +3

    I did a dozen albums in the 90s, using a Tascam 4-track. I recorded four tracks of backing onto double-speed cassette, dumped to a reel-to-reel machine, then played it back (usually in mono) to one track of another double-speed cassette, and overdubbed onto the remaining three.
    Oh, and there was no MIDI, or reverb units. But there was an 8-bit sampler, and a Kawai R50 drum machine.
    My low-tech teen years.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      I’d forgotten about double speed 4-tracks. And I entirely remember that workflow. One track of vocals, right? What did you put on the first four tracks? Mono drums, bass, basic guitars?

    • @StefanTravis
      @StefanTravis Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp :-). There was me thinking I'd come up with something new. The usual procedure was:
      1A) Drums (R50, or tape loop)
      2A) Bass line, played manually on a Casio SK-5
      3A) Treble line
      4A) Initially a guide track from the R50's aux out, so I could play bass and treble without needing the actual drums all the way through. Later, overwrite it probably with pad chords.
      1B) Dump of 1-4A
      2B, 3B, 4B) Whatever snippets of TV I'd recorded on the big tape machine that week, samples of found sound, or occasionally me speaking bad poetry I'd written... in Esperanto.
      I'd come up with the song structure first, then programs drums for it, and only then find something to sample for the bass sound, then come up with a bass line. Same for the other layers. So, I knew when there would be an effect, a bit of movie dialog, a section where the drums dropped out... but exactly what effect, never planned ahead.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Oh interesting! For some reason I had in mind you were doing band demos. I used to to band demos like this in the late 80s and let’s just say they were very low fi. Although very cool - one mic in the drum kit, that sort of thing. But a really good demonstration which, after all, is what a demo is supposed to be. So how do you overwrite the 4A track? Before the bounce, right?
      And I’ve just remembered, those portasudios had varispeed, right? So you could slow the take a bit, record something and then bring it back up to speed?

    • @StefanTravis
      @StefanTravis Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp IIRC, you could vary the transport speed by +/- up to 25%. So in principle you could record one track at one speed, change the speed, retune your instruments to match the new speed, record, and change it back. I did use it to repitch some spoken overdubs.
      But really, it gave you a choice: Record at high speed for higher sound quality for less recording time, or low for lower and more. A C90 cassette gave 22 mins, allowing a set of 4 or 5 songs in sequence, with transitions. The final mixdown to master was of the whole set - one misplaced fader, and you have to start again.
      Regarding the 4A "guide track" - record it at the same time as the 1A drums, bring it up when recording 2A and 3A parts that *don't* have drums on 1A, then use 1A-3A as a guide for recording over it. Yes, before bouncing. Does that make sense?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Yes it does. There’s a good trick that I don’t know if you tried with funk guitars - you slow down the tape a tone or two, record the guitars in that lower key, and then bring the tape back up to speed. The guitars have a very wispy thin quality but are super tight because the transients have been made more spikey. Prince did this *a lot*.

  • @whette_fahrtz
    @whette_fahrtz 2 месяца назад +6

    been a huge fan of this channel since it came across my recommendeds
    i know absolutely nothing about music other than how to listen to it, but many of the songs i love are from the 80s

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh that's absolutely fantastic! Music fans who don't make music are the people I'm really trying to make videos for :-)

  • @samalcis
    @samalcis 2 месяца назад +10

    Three minutes to solve a Rubik’s cube, all while multitasking, very impressive sir! 😊

  • @thedddemon
    @thedddemon 2 месяца назад +7

    Your videos are such a treat, thank you!

  • @paulc7798
    @paulc7798 8 дней назад +1

    What amazes me most is how you managed to do all of this video in reverse just so it looked like you can do a Rubik's cube. Hat tipped.

  • @muppetpaster
    @muppetpaster Месяц назад +1

    6:08 When I was a kid, we had a Mitsubishi X-800 32-track machine in our studio at home...An 80's digital machine...I also remember a Sony DASH PCM-3324 .......These were as far as I remember as expensive as a house back then....

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Exactly right. You couldn’t cut and splice with a razor blade like you could with traditional tape, but there was no generational loss and you didn’t lose the transients due to lots of playback during tracking. One doesn’t want to pry, but that sounds awfully professional for a studio at home. Did you also have a console? ;)

  • @rebeccaschade3987
    @rebeccaschade3987 2 месяца назад +7

    About "record on tape". What Espen means, is that if you want to emulate the kind of sound that most people remember from the '80s, then recording to tape can help with that. He's not suggesting that this is necessarily a technically superior method, only that it can provide a nostalgic '80s sound.
    Also, I think he means small 4-track home recorders, like Tascam Portastudio and such, not reel-to-reel studio stuff.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I think you must be right. I think it must be a nostalgia thing. Ironically none of the 80s music actually sounded like it was recorded on Tascam Portastudios and was, really, pretty hi-fi, so it’s very much a nostalgia for a sound as it’s remembered. But all good. I’m certainly not criticising or arguing.

    • @rebeccaschade3987
      @rebeccaschade3987 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp I remember most of the '80s music from listening to my older brother's vinyl records, although I did listen to cassettes as well. But Espen Kraft has had videos about recording your tracks onto a Portastudio to get the classic demo tape sound, which is why I'm assuming that is what he was referring to. I mean, who could afford proper studio multitrack tape machines for home studios? :D

    • @apislapis
      @apislapis 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes you're right @rebeccaschade3987 he's talking about transferring your digital recording to tape. I think Espen has a video coming out shortly about transferring or mastering audio on video tape, I'm sure I read that on Patreon. I recall Alesis used VHS tapes for multitrack recording back in the 80s.

    • @JckeojRND
      @JckeojRND 17 дней назад

      @@apislapis The Alesis VHS multitrack recorder (the ADAT, mother of the ADAT interface standard) recorded digitally actually. So it sounded pretty Hi-Fi.

  • @oblitafier
    @oblitafier 2 месяца назад +3

    Mitsubishi made digital multitracks (32 tracks) in the 80's. Peter Gabriel's So was recorded on one.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Ah yes, Mitsubishi! I could only remember the Sony 24 and 48. And “So” was an entirely digital process and had the label DDD on the CD. Like “Brothers in Arms”.

  • @electroinblack6852
    @electroinblack6852 2 месяца назад +2

    I do remember a lot of bands on stage with a Akai reel to Reel spinning in the Background on stage. I loved the visual so much It was one of the reasons I wanted one.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh I agree! Soft Cell had one, and so did Cocteau Twins. Looked to great!

    • @electroinblack6852
      @electroinblack6852 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp And early human league. Maybe it was backing track with drums. It is very Iconic.

    • @jfroines
      @jfroines 2 месяца назад +2

      Yeah, I think OMD used to do that in their earliest days. They called the tape machine Winston I think?

    • @monsirto
      @monsirto 2 месяца назад +1

      Yep, loops. We have digital loopers now. They do look cool on stage!

    • @Jay.Ramone
      @Jay.Ramone 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, I think Phil Oakey was miffed when OMD started doing it, as he felt Human League were the first and it was their thing.

  • @MyrddinTriguelMedia
    @MyrddinTriguelMedia Месяц назад +1

    Speaking of bus compression, one of the most non-subtle examples are the drums on A-Ha - Take on Me. That is pure squashed SSL bus compression sound.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Yes it is. I’ll go further, that’s what the SSL bus compressor sounds like with a ratio of 4 when you open the attack, set the release to about 100ms, and push quite hard into it. It’s not subtle.
      To be fair to Espen I think he was talking about the loudness wars. Though that’s really all about mastering, not mixing.

    • @MyrddinTriguelMedia
      @MyrddinTriguelMedia Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp I used a ratio of 10 in my recreation of the song but I could be wrong. I just tried with 4 and the difference is subtle enough (I used the Waves SSLComp).

  • @ChrisHaveard
    @ChrisHaveard 2 месяца назад +4

    The sound of tape was something that musicians fought against in the 80's. Tape saturation and wow and flutter was our nemesis. These days it would be good if you wanted your track to sound like an 80's demo tape or simply as an effect. To each their own.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      Completely agree. Absolute nemesis. Also printing a mix to 2” tape at 30ips is hardly lo-fi.

  • @electroinblack6852
    @electroinblack6852 2 месяца назад +3

    Early Human League- timing issues , high noise floor, playing errors , very little reverb but some on the vocals , it has post punk electro all over it. with a punk energy and vitality. yes i know it was 1978 but the 80's really started in late 1970's. But oh sweet jesus for me it is wonderful and exiting. ruclips.net/video/hENt5xGR8Ng/видео.html

  • @alman-world
    @alman-world Месяц назад +1

    Love your vlogs - every single one.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Thank you so much! This was my first ‘reaction’ video. I honestly had no idea if anyone would find it interesting 😂

  • @KeytarKris
    @KeytarKris Месяц назад +1

    Awesome video. Espen Kraft is so kool. I love his talent, knowledge, and skills.

  • @richymoore
    @richymoore 2 месяца назад +2

    A technique I usually deploy to try counter the static feel of the grid is to split my drum tracks into 4 or 5 different tracks, and then slightly offset the snares a few ms before the kicks, and the opposite for the hi hats, rides, percs etc, and give each a slightly different swing / shuffle to try humanise the groove. Even when everything is quantised, taking this step post sequencing can help breathe a lot of life into an electronic drum track, and pretty much emulates the effect you mentioned when hardware isn’t 100% in sync. Again, offsetting your bass a few ms either way against your kicks can have a great humanising effect.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      I think this is a really good technique. If I’m understanding you though, the alignment between, say, the kick and snare is still fixed. See if you can find a way of varying that too. It won’t necessarily change the feel in terms of timing, but it will mean that the combined sound is slightly different every time which makes the whole thing really come alive…

    • @richymoore
      @richymoore 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Yeah, it gives the whole thing a little bit of extra swagger so you actually subconsciously hear multiple transients on the same grid line, instead of them being perfectly stacked on top of each other, but to achieve what you’re getting at the only solution I have there is to grab the odd hit here and there and slightly offset them again, for a little extra humanisation of the groove. It’s time consuming but thats my usual method to beat the rigid feel of a daw grid, a little tempo automation goes a long way too, obviously within the right genre but I always like to creep a track up or down 1 or 2 bpm when the feel of the tune allows for it, that’s when keep pitch functions on delays come in really handy, to avoid pitching warble on synced delays. Love your videos though dude, some great advice on them. It’s getting harder and harder to find production youtubers that don’t talk out their arse these days.

  • @soulextracter
    @soulextracter 2 месяца назад +4

    Espen's Jupiter 8 is borrowed if I remember correctly.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      @@soulextracter That’s a nice thing to borrow :)

  • @jamesdefrancesco7765
    @jamesdefrancesco7765 2 месяца назад +4

    Digital synths that had analog filters was afn 80s thing. Ensoniq, Korg DSS1, Microwave 1, etc. Maybe that was what Estrogen was getting at.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Yes, I think that’s what he meant. Although none of the FM synths had filters obviously. He might also have meant the LA synths like the D50. Who knows.

    • @sub-jec-tiv
      @sub-jec-tiv 2 месяца назад

      For a guy my age, with tons of synths, he honestly doesn’t know what he’s talking about

    • @EstuaryMists
      @EstuaryMists 2 месяца назад

      He probably had the Prophet VS in mind when making that statement.

  • @urilahat8090
    @urilahat8090 2 месяца назад +5

    Ahhhhh the cube noise

  • @grunntalll
    @grunntalll 2 месяца назад +2

    i just play the drum parts on a midi keyboard into the computer and manually pull them a tiny bit closer to the grid if they sound off.

  • @electroinblack6852
    @electroinblack6852 2 месяца назад +2

    If you want to sound like the 80's write synthpop songs with lyrics and stop that generative ambient noodling and Just use your DAW as a multitracker. I personally love music with a high noise floor. overproduction is rampant. Those 80's dodgy live mixtapes in Camden market were wonderful.And the tape inserts were a work of Art ....somtimes.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      @@electroinblack6852 well ain’t that the truth

  • @jedstephensmusic0001
    @jedstephensmusic0001 2 месяца назад +1

    I read somewhere that Wham's last christmas had just a basic drum pattern and all the fills were tapped in on thte drum machine pads in as overdubs, would have saved a lot of time programming them, so kind of makes sense

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      That’s absolutely not impossible, and it would make a lot of sense. I’m pretty sure that in Heart (Pet Shop Boys) the extra kicks when he sings “My heart keeps missing a beat” are played rather than programmed. That’s what they sound like to me. Every one is ever so slightly different, and the velocities are off. Plus they sound awesome which is also a giveaway 😂

    • @ultramouse
      @ultramouse 2 месяца назад +2

      Prince played all his songs on the Linn Drum with no programming. Of course, we can’t all be prince…

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Ah - he did programme quite a lot actually! His setup was quite interesting. He had his Linn permanently rigged up to his console and with all the separate outs already patched. But he used to not only use a lot of detuning (which for various technical reasons changes the groove on the Linn) but he also used to put guitar effect pedals in line. For example: if you listen to Hot Thing, the bass line is actually a Linn tom through a distortion pedal. The distortion gives it a note, and then the note is tuned by tuning the sample in the Linn. Very interesting and creative process…

    • @ultramouse
      @ultramouse 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp ok “all” was probably an exaggeration but Susan Rogers talked about how he would map out whole songs in his head and just bang them out on the Linn. Incredible to me. The guitar pedals on separate outputs thing is how I’ve done it for many years and he and Aphex Twin are the main inspirations for it. It opens up so many new possibilities of sound - and like you point out, sometimes changing the sounds can change the groove to something unexpected.

  • @oceanix1929
    @oceanix1929 2 месяца назад +1

    He meant using samplers like Akai s612, s950, s900, etc to sample synths sounds. Many bands did this in the late 80’s - early 90’s to add a different vibe and color to those sounds. Some of those samplers really have a unique sound

  • @unclemick-synths
    @unclemick-synths 2 месяца назад +1

    4:41 yep, EQing on the way in to anticipate what I would get back off tape. On my Tascam 244 that included anticipating for the extra effect of the bounces because I'd need the EQ for doing the submixing during the bounce!
    However, the thing I hate most with tape is the linearity. And I hate that with DAWs too. I switched to MPC to get away from it but it seems to have snuck in via MPC 3.0 😢

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      I love the workflows of the old MPCs. I really love working with my current hardware sequencer and basically do full arrangement on it so, by the time it comes to tracking, I'm just pretty much hitting 'play' and then doing overdubs.

  • @unclemick-synths
    @unclemick-synths 2 месяца назад +6

    This wasn't the EK video I was expecting you to comment on! 😀 In many ways I'm glad because he displayed a lot of (intentional?) ignorance in that other video. Not only ignorance of the realities of developing and pricing electronic products (I spent the first 15 years of my career in product development for both large and small companies so I have some personal insight) but also he's encouraging the common misapprehension about "VSTs in a box" being about the VST. A VST (or ZEN-Core) in a box is not about the software, it's all about THE BOX and the user experience the physical interface delivers. Plus, developing that interface as an electronic product does actually take a bunch of time and money. 🙄
    Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed this video 👍. I think the problem with talking about sampling is it's like talking about compression - it doesn't just mean one thing. There's sampling as in making loops from records, there's sampling as in multisampled sounds intended to be played chromatically, and then there's the sampler used as a player of chunks of audio within a direct-to-stereo MIDI setup.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      @@unclemick-synths Yes. I haven’t actually watched that video (yet) but I realise there’s controversy. There are certainly at least a couple of reasons why a VST in a box would be different - one is latency, another is integrated controls, and that’s not to mention the preamps. However, there is another dirty secret of the digital industry which is that the raw processing power put into boxes is way below that of a computer. This doesn’t matter until you start to do things like emulate chorus or distortion, at which point, particularly with the latter, it matters a great deal. This is why there are several plugins that do fantastic jobs of mimicking analog modulation - for example Antresol by D16 - but literally zero effects pedals. Appreciate this is a slightly different point. Personally I’m not against buying pretty much anything provided it sounds okay, is cheap, and will probably hold its value. Ironically most of the time the analog gear is cheaper.

    • @SenorTropiCat
      @SenorTropiCat 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Thats why the best are the vintage digital hardware synths and effects from the late 80s, early 90s. There the limitations weren't a secret, and shaped the sound in a very unique way every time.

  • @ARP_2600
    @ARP_2600 2 месяца назад +2

    The myth is that Depeche Mode had a tape machine instead of a drummer on stage which had to be started by one of them. Another myth is that one layer of the bass sound of "behind the wheel" is the sound of someone hitting the tube of a vacuum cleaner, if I remember correctly. The bass sound of "world in my eyes" consists of several layers judging from people who tried to recreate it and came close to the original. I wonder if these three sounds were sequenced on three synths back then or if the individual sounds were sampled in an emulator. Now let's talk about recording to tape. In my opinion what is really a big difference between modern day recordings trying to sound like the 80s and actual 80s songs is the impact that drums have. The drums had a much more prominent role and the vocals seemed to be a bit more in the background, kind of suppressed by the drums. It almost has this pumping effect of sidechaining even though it was probably not sidechained at all. It's just a theory, but for a long time I thought that this effect of the drums pushing away all the other sounds came from recording to tape maybe because of the limited frequency spectrum tape has.

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад

      I remember from a broadcast of BBC Radio One's 'Roundtable' weekly show (in which musicians reviewed singles released that week) at some date in the 80s when someone mentioned how loud the drum machine (a Linn LM-1 or Linndrum, I think) was in the mixes of various recent releases and how much further that was likely to go. So it was a thing that people noticed at the time.

  • @Esperluet
    @Esperluet Месяц назад

    12:29 The Synclavier was able to sample if I'm not wrong

  • @bnjmnwst
    @bnjmnwst Месяц назад +1

    3:43 Use tape the way you'd use an amp to re-amp. Just run your 2 bus out to it, and then bring it right back in. Or don't record it at all. Just use the signal path.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, the Clasp system does this. Some people love it. It’s a lot of admin though, and you need a large tape machine in your studio. My studio is definitely not big enough for a 24 track machine!

    • @bnjmnwst
      @bnjmnwst Месяц назад

      @DistortThePreamp You just need a reel-to-reel 2-track machine. I've seen it done two ways: Send your master bus out to the input of the tape machine, then either 1) just take the output of the tape machine, in monitor mode, right back into the DAW, or 2) record to tape & use the listen back feature. In both cases, record to a stereo track in the DAW & mix it in to taste. So parallel processing is or can be involved, as well. You can get as much or as little of that tape sound as you like.

  • @AntonMochalin
    @AntonMochalin 2 месяца назад +1

    What I'm interested in is what exactly happened in early 90s (probably late 80s in fact) that even in like 1992 music press was speaking of 80s as the era that has totally ended. Was that the availability of digital tech or something else? I started playing guitar in like 1988 but my first creative steps like performing for my schoolmates and writing my first songs and trying trackers and DAWs were in 90s and we always looked back into 1980s as some "previous era", everything has changed in 1990s. But what was that exactly that changed?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Very interesting question. Musically, it was the probably the ascent of grunge, particularly Nirvana’s extraordinary success. This was a more definitive end to an era than had occurred with previous eras. It also marked a geographic shift from the UK to the US. It wasn’t quite as seismic as punk, but it set the stage for a lot changes in the way records sounded - virtually no reverb on vocals, different kinds of guitars, different kinds of arrangements, different drum sounds, less emphasis on synthesisers, and so on. Also the 90s was the decade when professional producers really started to make records using Pro Tools. This opened up many new options for editing, particularly around tightening rhythm tracks, and led to yet more new sounds being created. Sorry this is a brief answer - it’s a huge topic! And one that gets oversimplified a lot…

    • @AntonMochalin
      @AntonMochalin 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp for me it was less about grunge (though Nirvana's success was very very noticeable) and more about rave culture on one hand and also hiphop: even Michael Jackson and Prince started inviting rappers for their songs. But it was again about US: Detroit techno, Chicago house and hiphop from IDK - New York? But BTW unlike house techno had a lot of European influences and many influential techno producers were from Germany and UK and then there was that mini-explosion of ambient techno/house and breakbeat/jungle/hardcore in 1991-1994 which was dominated by UK producers.

  • @thameddler
    @thameddler 2 месяца назад +1

    Recently discovered you and subscribed. Great content!

    • @thameddler
      @thameddler 2 месяца назад +1

      Ps I record to tape

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Really! That’s fascinating! Do you record to multitrack tape? Like an 8-track? Or do you mean that you bounce out mixes to tape?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you!!!

    • @thameddler
      @thameddler 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp I’m trying to make early house and techno styles, looking for a rawer and more unpolished sound than is usually associated with the 80s, and couldn’t manage to emulate that with plug ins, so I bought myself a Tascam cassette portastudio, I’m still experimenting, but even just running the whole mix through it has astounding results, and it is in fact much cleaner than I was expecting.

    • @thameddler
      @thameddler 2 месяца назад

      I realise Espen was referring to proper rtr tape machines, and that is what would have been used back then, but obviously like you say, cost, hassle and non-availability of tape precluded that route.

  • @RaquelFoster
    @RaquelFoster 2 месяца назад +1

    I think hybrid just means digital synths with analog filters like the ESQ-1 or Akai rack samplers.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Yeah, I think that’s exactly what he meant. I was so conscious of not wanting to talk smack about him that I was being very careful about what I said. I was going to say digital synths with analog filters, but of course the FM synths didn’t have any filters at all. And the Akais weren’t really synths. So then I started wondering if he meant the LA synths with a sample and synthesis… but I think you’re right. I found his video a bit of a wild ride. Apparently he records to tape. Let me repeat that, to tape. And rolls off 80Hz. Didn’t want to point out that a lot of his favourite 80s records were recorded entirely digitally (apart from the final two track) with nothing at all rolled off before the cutting ;) Anyway, love Espen. Love him.

  • @Feldspar__
    @Feldspar__ 2 месяца назад +2

    I record to stereo reel-to-reel, then re-record it digitally. Having your production perspective is fantastic. Now do a video on distorting preamps.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      Haha! Yes, I do need to do a video on distorting preamps. Basically a lot of what I do is overloading some of the input stages somewhere in the chain. Turns out the more you do that the easier the mix is because you’re baking in all the harmonic saturation. So I even record the drums hot into the interface which (produces analog saturation rather than digital clipping). Awesome comment.

  • @spengill
    @spengill Месяц назад +1

    so good!!

  • @replaceablehead
    @replaceablehead 2 месяца назад +2

    I wish tape was a myth. Alas Relax is analogue, although the rest of Pleasuredome was tracked digitally. Big Chair is 1/2 inch tape. There are plenty of examples where some part of the recording process was digital but very few that were tracked, mixed and mastered in digital. The closest might be Christopher Cross or The Bears.
    I don't mind a hybrid approach but a completely digital recording to me sounds harsh and lacks the opaque blurring required to separate the listener from the performance in time and space. Tape does a good job of making something sound "like a record", the subtle, almost imperceivable smearing removes the audio from reality in the same way a photograph is very subtly not quite reality, it's a facsimile of reality. It makes things just a little more "cinematic" and surreal.
    I don't think tape is the only way of getting a little bit of this kind of effect but I don't think it's negligible.
    I've been hoping to find proof that contradicts what I've found so far but every example I've looked into that people claimed to be digital always turned out to be largely tape. If anyone knows of any real examples, I would love to hear them.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      I think “So” by Peter Gabriel was entirely digital. They even had a logo “DDD” on the CD. Same with Brothers In Arms, Graceland…
      You’re right about Big Chair though - it was tracked on a digital multitrack but then mixed to analog.
      Having said all of that, I was (and still am) slightly confused about what Espen actually meant? Was he talking about printing mixes to tape? Or recording on tape multitrack? Even if it’s the former, 2” tape at 30ips is not even close to the sound of a compact cassette. Who knows… one day I’ll ask him…

  • @RelaxingAmbientMusic-dl5rp
    @RelaxingAmbientMusic-dl5rp Месяц назад

    Another great video! I never had the patience to figure out the Rubik's Cube! You didn't eat enough of the pop-corn! I think hybrid synths were synths like the Ensoniq SQ80 or Oscar. I disagree that the 80's was mostly digital as mentioned by Espen. What about all the early Duran Duran, Spandau, Gary Numan Human League music pre-1983?

  • @juxty3102
    @juxty3102 2 месяца назад +1

    My question is that a lot of modern mixes sound very loud, where 80s songs are quieter overall due to being recorded on tape, allowing to hear the different individual elements of the mix/song.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Ah, that’s got nothing to do with tape. That’s all to do with the way the were mixed, and then something called mastering that comes after the mix and prepares the song for its final destination - streaming, CD, vinyl, whatever. Some of the 80s records I have are amongst the loudest in my collection.

  • @PJamS_Vibes
    @PJamS_Vibes 2 месяца назад +1

    I first solved the cube when that 12 year old English kid wrote the book on how to solve the cube back in the early 80s. Oh yeah, good video btw.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Haha, awesome! I’m still making the same cube moves I was making in the 80s. The muscle memory never goes…

  • @Matt-zp1jn
    @Matt-zp1jn 2 месяца назад +1

    Hence the Alpha Juno 2 synth he has! 😊

  • @gregparker1012
    @gregparker1012 2 месяца назад

    Re the tape.. I just did an ELO inspired song and the final un-polish was putting the whole mix through a tape simulation to, 1 narrow up the sterio field, 2 lose some hi end and warm it up, 3 compress and overdrive dynamic peaks, 4 introduce tape speed fluctuation. All done super sparingly, but applied to the whole mix made it sound "genuine and old" and took away the "did it at home on a digital workstation" sound.

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад

      Which of course is the very opposite of how producers & engineers thought in the 80s when the aim was a hi-fi sound. Lo-fi arrived in the 90s and I wasn't impressed as to my ears it just sounded weak and unimpressive.

    • @gregparker1012
      @gregparker1012 2 месяца назад

      @@RebeccaTurner-ny1xx It's about capturing a vibe and it's been going on back into the 60s in various forms. Beatles using paper megaphone effects. Stones recording in the substandard studio where their blues heroes were committed to tape. Something old, something new something borrowed, something shamelessly nicked.

  • @alanredversangel
    @alanredversangel 2 месяца назад +1

    Whenever i have black coffee and salted popcorn i hear an air raid siren going off in my guts.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      I know the feeling. ItI try not to do star jumps afterwards...

  • @alex47a659
    @alex47a659 2 месяца назад +1

    80s Bryan Ferry/Roxy Music reverbs were so lush, so long.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Ah - they sounded really lush, but they weren’t nearly as long as you might think. I assume you’re thinking of records like Avalon and Boys And Girls which both sound beautiful. Both of those records were mixed by Bob Clearmountain on an SSL 4000 console, and the main reverb was the Lexicon 224. I think the reverb tails would have been 2-3 seconds which is indeed fairly long, but nothing like the huge tails you can get with a modern plugin. I realised afterwards that I should have said what I meant by a ‘long reverb’. A tail of 2-3s is really huge but I think that people listening would imagine the tails to be 8s or more. That’s certainly the impression you get from listening to some synthwave which is drenched. But you make a very good point, and my statement was rather sloppy. Thanks for picking me up on it.

    • @alex47a659
      @alex47a659 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Giorgio Moroder with Berlin's Take My Breath Away is a great example of this too. And as a result, Samantha Fox with True Devotion.

    • @Station2Station-du2gh
      @Station2Station-du2gh 2 месяца назад +1

      224. Grab a OTO Bam or CXM for a great modern repro.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh those are amazing boxes!

  • @nichttuntun3364
    @nichttuntun3364 2 месяца назад +1

    Hi. Could it be Espen means to record the final summed mix onto tape for that nice thick low end thumb and a slightly rolled off high end plus the gluing effect? Cheers.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      I think that must be what he meant. Although it’s really more of a lo-fi thing that an 80s thing. As I said in my reaction, some of those 80s records never touched tape. Like “So” by Peter Gabriel - that was entirely digital. Hence the label “DDD” on the compact discs. And I don’t think anybody would say that didn’t sound like the 80s. Same with Tango in the Night (Fleetwood Mac). Also, there’s a world of difference between printing a mix to 2” tape on a properly setup high end recorder and printing to compact cassette.

    • @nichttuntun3364
      @nichttuntun3364 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Correct. Early 80th still where influenced by the 70th tho. But you're right, a lot of 80th stuff sounds direct in the face and partly transient hard and digital. On the other side, records like Kraftwerk's Computerwelt have a warmth and roundness to it, that reminds on tape sound.

  • @unclemick-synths
    @unclemick-synths 2 месяца назад +3

    2:08 apart from it's trite lyrics, naff sound choices, and horrifically unironic cha-cha-cha ending, the key changes in _I Just Called To Say I Love You_ really overflowed the cliché bucket. To think the same guy wrote classics like Superstition! 😱

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      I know, it's nuts right! His talent was very, er, variable...

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад

      Wonder seems to have had a genius period of the mid 70s for about four albums (although they're not as perfect as critics make out, IMHO, such as the repetitive and, yes, trite 'Isn't She Lovely') and then his muse vanished never to return. He has since made a living touring, playing that awful mouth organ on other people's records and resting on his laurels.

  • @Zarraman
    @Zarraman 2 месяца назад +1

    I've just watched another video about digital music in 1980's. The first album recorded in digital to won a Grammy for best recording is Cristopher Cross debut, with the Sailing single in 1981!!! This blew my mind! How many more records in the 80's was recorded in digital?! ruclips.net/video/NJsSYnrMNYE/видео.html

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      So many. The digital multitracks were great because although you couldn’t cut and splice tape at least the sound didn’t change during the actual recording session. Most high end studios had at least one digital multitrack (24 or 48) in one of their rooms. Without being too mean about it, it sort of makes a mockery of people who bang on about how important tape was to ‘the sound’. Without being impolite, one wonders how they reached their strong opinions, because it’s certainly not from experience.

    • @Zarraman
      @Zarraman 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp As I said in the other commentary it's terrible how the history is being changed day after day by these kind of information from people that seems to never work on real studios in the 80's

  • @em-dashman4404
    @em-dashman4404 2 месяца назад +1

    This video is strangely ASMR 😎

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Haha! I wonder if that’s the sound of the popcorn, or the sound of the Rubik’s Cube 😂😂😂

  • @JacobSkriver
    @JacobSkriver 2 месяца назад +1

    Sampling analog synths are more a thing of the 90's

  • @trollgoodman7808
    @trollgoodman7808 Месяц назад

    Incorrect regarding the sampling of synths, Simple Minds, Depeche Mode etc etc all sampled synths to make layers.

  • @Pintosonic
    @Pintosonic 2 месяца назад +2

    I’d be curious to hear your reaction to Espen’s video where he says that basically all modern synths are a scam. He got a lot of heat about that lately. Even if I disagree with a lot of things he said, there was a lot of unhinged reactions to his video.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      I’ve heard about this but haven’t watched it yet. And I’ve been wondering if I should make a reaction. If lots of people give a thumbs up to this comment then I might… ;)

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp I think he was being deliberately provocative.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      I’ve now watched it, and there is no question. At one point he starts talking about sex workers. He is 100% being provocative. I’m sure he basically believes his thesis, but the over-the-top language is probably designed to wind people up ;)

  • @T.Ross.
    @T.Ross. 2 месяца назад +3

    I think I lost several years of the 1980s trying to solve a Rubik's cube. Ruddy thing.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      😂😂😂 I admit I was worried that the muscle memory would be gone… I think it’s a sign of a misspent youth…

    • @rockstar-technology
      @rockstar-technology 2 месяца назад +1

      I think it’s only fun if you look up a guide for how to do it.

  • @geejayreid
    @geejayreid 2 месяца назад +1

    I don't understand why someone would want their recording to particularly sound like it was made in the eighties. Much of the music I love is from the eighties and give me a real sense of nostalgia, as well as just sounding wonderful in itself. Things like the Synclavier, the Fairlight, the Linn drum and the DMX still thrill me. As do Prophet 5 brass sounds, gated reverbs and all the rest of it. So I can understand, for example, wanting to get a sense of punch and vitality into your drums sounds like the part 1 video. But trying to recreate every last glitch and artefact of eighties recordings like a sort of musical Sealed Knott Society seems odd. If I want to listen to something that sounds like a Human League record, I'll probably listen to a Human League record.
    I think that Billy Childish generally records directly to Revox reel to reel. I'm not exactly sure what his overall aesthetic is but he's definitely not trying to recreate the eighties.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Yup. This is too interesting a question for me to give a quick reply. I’ll probably make a short video about this question at some stage. But in the meantime I, of course, agree. I use a lot of 80s workflows for very specific reasons, none of which is to ‘sound like the 80s’. Rest assured that, despite the title of the video, everything I do is because I think it sounds better, not because I’m chasing yesterday’s sound ;) Very legit question.

  • @Station2Station-du2gh
    @Station2Station-du2gh 2 месяца назад +1

    3:59 neither does he.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Is that my comment that “I love Espen so much, I really do…” 😂😂😂

  • @gynoid74
    @gynoid74 2 месяца назад +1

    a good 2 track can still do something nice to a recording, but no way would i go back to multitrack tape haha.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I think that’s what he must have meant. Because going back to tape multi-tracks would drive everyone crazy!

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад

      Is high quality magnetic tape still manufactured?

  • @chateautemp
    @chateautemp 2 месяца назад +1

    New to the channel. Can you do a 'How to make your own drum pad with tinfoil' video? :)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Yes! I’ve put it on the list. It’s super simple - basically just a powered switch (with some batteries). Another way is to use piezo pickups under something like rubber which lasts a bit longer than the aluminium method. But I’ll see if I can put something useful together…

    • @chateautemp
      @chateautemp 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp good tips - just love the idea that anything can be done by the resourceful and slightly obsessed! :)

  • @markaprill6501
    @markaprill6501 Месяц назад

    You need an ensoniq keyboard and a cassette player.

  • @andrewtagg3690
    @andrewtagg3690 2 месяца назад +4

    How can I give 2 likes 👍 👍?

  • @rjbush7955
    @rjbush7955 2 месяца назад +1

    Record to tape. Nope, not now it’s the most expensive recording medium still around. Even dodgy brand cassettes cost a small fortune.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Quite. I was vaguely considering producing a session in one of the few London studios that still has a tape multi-track just for the workflow, but the tape price alone was so much more than I had remembered.

  • @mufakkas9731
    @mufakkas9731 2 месяца назад

    What they're also missing is that this began as an anti-nerd pursuit; I think these two guys just weren’t "cool" enough, so they overlooked the "fashion" aspect-looking, sounding, and thinking fashionable when singing and playing.

  • @burns46824
    @burns46824 Месяц назад +1

    All due respect to Espen, but his music does not sound like the 80s.
    I'm not trying to sound 80s, but I do record and mix on analog tape and use an analog console, which will get you a lot closer than recording digital and using plug-ins, despite whatever synths you use.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Haha - your Espen comment is so true. So you record and mix on analog tape using a console? Is this professionally in a studio? In which case I would withdraw any criticism (which was really aimed at what I perceived to be Espen trying to say home recordists should switch to tape). I’m assuming you must be in some kind of studio setup because the sheer cost of the tape and admin in terms of keeping everything aligned and maintained is quite an overhead. Plus, most people can’t fit a console in their homes. Definitely send me an email (address in the description) if you don’t want to post info in the comment.

    • @burns46824
      @burns46824 Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp hi. I have a private studio in Oregon. API 1608 console with automation, Studer A800 24-track, MTR-90 16-track, ATR-102 1/2” 2-track, modified Studer A80 1/2” 2-track. The sound quality I’m getting is pretty insane. It really does pay to do full analog if you can do it, but it costs about $1 million.

    • @burns46824
      @burns46824 Месяц назад +1

      Also, moving-fader automation is KEY for getting that slick early 80s sound. My Otari is sync’d to my Studer A800 via a Timeline MicroLync and I control the whole system with ProTools!

    • @burns46824
      @burns46824 Месяц назад

      also, been appreciating your videos about hand playing bass and using the internal sequencer on the LinnDrum… I think I’m finally learning my lesson on this

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      OMG I swear you are one of the *very few* to understand this. About half of the reason I started this channel was because I felt somebody needed to teach RUclips viewers how to ride a vocal. I literally can’t find anything about it and I don’t see how it’s possible to make a record without it. Everyone’s talking about processing chains but they don’t actually know how to use a fader to make the vocal intelligible and sit right. Of course I keep putting off that video because I want o find a way of doing it *really well* so it isn’t boring, and I think I’m also gonna offend a lot of people with my choice of DAW for mixing. I love Ableton to bits, but you can’t mix vocals in it because it doesn’t have trim automation. And, for some reason, neither does Studio One. I don’t want to be the kind of creator that says things like “you need to have such-and-such if you want to make a record” but, honestly, I could not mix without trim, especially vocals.

  • @AndrewLeSynt
    @AndrewLeSynt 2 месяца назад

    at the end: make the music you want! forget all the rules. at the end: if your ahit sounds like shit, its shit, if its an awesome idea it will be sound like an awesome no matter you record it 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @psilocyberspaceman
    @psilocyberspaceman Месяц назад +1

    I think it’s quite poor to leave out the link to the video to which you’re are reacting.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      @@psilocyberspaceman OMG that’s a really good point! It had never occurred to me! I will rectify this! Thank you! 🙏

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Okay, fixed! I've now linked to Espen's video in the description, as a card at the opening of the video ,and I've also linked to his channel at the end with a message suggesting that people subscribe. Thanks for bringing this to my attention :-)

    • @psilocyberspaceman
      @psilocyberspaceman Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp You’re a real gentleman.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Thank you, but really I deserve no credit! I actually felt really bad when you pointed this out. It’s the first reaction video I’ve ever done which is perhaps half an excuse - but really I should have thought a little harder about this. Thanks again for pointing this out :)

  • @keithrobichaux
    @keithrobichaux 2 месяца назад +1

    I’ll take the tape but not aspen. Thanks for cool vids.

  • @mglohmeyer
    @mglohmeyer 2 месяца назад +1

    Yes, he records to multi-track tape a lot. He also and he sells his music on cassette tape.
    I believe he is using a Tascam multi-track cassette tape unit, not a reel to reel or studio quality multi-track. If I remember correctly he does it for the tape effects (making it lo-fi) as much as for the limitation of process (limited tracks and methodology). He may also do it to make a modern recording played on a digital device sound like it is being played on an 80's Walkman or boombox. He did a whole video on this a while back, probably related to the video you commented on.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh wow. I will have to check this out. Every artistic choice is valid. But that’s definitely a lo-fi style thing rather than being authentically 80s. Not only were many 80s records entirely digital, but many of them were extremely elaborate in terms of the tracking process.

    • @mglohmeyer
      @mglohmeyer 2 месяца назад +1

      I just assumed lots of artists were using these relatively inexpensive cassette tape multi-track recorders back then - the ones that weren't signed to a major record deal at least. But that may be more a 90's and 2000's era thing?
      Today, I largely see using tape as a modern era FX, not so much to recreate the past or lo-fi, but to create warmth and character. Subtle tape saturation is kind of like the recording equivalent of pushing the Minimoog mixer to the max for a synth, or using a tube amp for a guitar.
      Hainbach is big on this among many others as a style choice. Lisa Bella Donna loves to use tape. She often records on reel to reel multi-track, and has even used recording to an old 8-track tape recorder and then recorded the playback from the 8-track while messing with the tape (moving it around, playing the tape so to speak), causing even more artifacts. But that's not an 80's thing. It is just a creative tool which works well for her music.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      I don’t think anybody was releasing records made of a portastudio. All the indie bands would go into cheap demo studios and knock out an album in two weeks, but you still needed some sort of semi-decent mic and way of recording drums. And nobody without some kind of record deal was putting out records because not only did you need distribution, you needed plugging to get radio play. People were for sure making demos using them, but those remained as demos. So it’s a style lo-fi thing. All good and legit, but not particularly related to any ‘80s sound’ :)

    • @klinkske
      @klinkske 2 месяца назад

      The underground independent cassette world sure did work with cassette multi track stuff recorded to cassete and sold on casse only, but i doubt Espen is talking about that, being a saw and pet shop fan.

    • @oceanix1929
      @oceanix1929 2 месяца назад +2

      Well, I am so disappointed he doesn’t release his RUclips videos in VHS tapes. It’s impossible to look and sound 80’s in this digital format so he is not that purist and authentic anyway… Until he doesn’t releases VHS tapes, his videos are snake oil.

  • @TheOriginalCoda
    @TheOriginalCoda 2 месяца назад +2

    I've been a subscriber of Espen's for years, but now he seems to have started a one-man mission to piss everyone off ("I'M ESPEN AND YOU'RE NOT" - what does that even mean?). It's a shame really, I unsubbed.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +5

      Oh that a bit sad. I think his heart is in the right place, even if he goes a bit OTT. I’ve only been doing this RUclips thing for a few months but it’s pretty weird. Most of the people are supportive, some are horrifically insulting, and you have to be very mentally resilient to keep calm about the whole thing. I can really see how creators end up screaming into the microphone.

    • @TheOriginalCoda
      @TheOriginalCoda 2 месяца назад +2

      @@DistortThePreamp Yeah, I have a lot of respect for people that do it, I couldn't. Skin's not thick enough.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      I’m wondering if I should do a ‘reaction’ (and analysis) to his controversial video about synths being scams. I haven’t watched it yet. On the one hand I don’t particularly want to get dragged into some controversy. On the other, a genuinely technical perspective might be useful…

    • @TheOriginalCoda
      @TheOriginalCoda 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp That would be great, if you stay on the technical analysis path and can avoid the politics.

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp Keep up the good work. You're a nice man just for creating interesting videos.

  • @relaxmax6808
    @relaxmax6808 2 месяца назад +2

    Ugh! ...All these methods are outdated! Personally to sound 80's I call the Doc, and we jump in the DeLorean.
    McFly.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      This is a good plan and one that works very well. The DeLorean never fails.

  • @mgaudio2677
    @mgaudio2677 Месяц назад +1

    I loved your videos up until now. I have to strongly disagree with your views regarding tape. Your very reactions are one of someone who seems like your avoiding tape because you’ve personally moved on and both the expense and effort it takes to work with tape is just too much for you to return. But consider the vast amount of hits that have been recorded on tape in the 80’s. To say “not all songs were recorded to tape in the 80’s” is a very narrow view that clearly belies some other reasoning. Such a small fraction of recordings were recorded on digital tape or Dash machines. Billy Idol Rebel Yell was one as an example. And some still do use them. Chris Lord Alge for one still uses Dash machines. And the flip side of that Foo Fighters still use tape as do many others. Is it difficult and temperamental? Indeed it is however it does have sonic qualities that only it can deliver. Perfectly recorded songs can be boring. Listen to Charlotte Sometimes by The Cure. I doubt there’s much above 8k on that. It sounds terrible, however I can’t imagine it any other way. It would lose its charm and feel if it had normal high end. Much in the same way remasters of old Motown songs sound horrible because they lost the dirt. Jumping Jack Flash and Street Fighting Man by the stones have an acoustic guitar track in the intro that was recorded on a crappy portable cassette recorder at home and then imported into the studio all distorted and with tons of wow and flutter. The song wouldn’t be the same without it. Sweet Dreams by Eurythmics was recorded on Teac 8 track tape.. I could go on and on. Keep up the great videos. Honestly although I disagree with your views on tape I really enjoy all of them. Anyways who cares what I think. The internet is full of people and their stupid opinions and now I’m one of them…

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +3

      Fair enough! I definitely don’t have a problem with the comment :) But just to clarify, Foo Fighters don’t use tape. They used tape in Wasting Light, but that was a one off. They record directly into Pro Tools apart from the Greg Kurstin stuff wherr he prefers Logic. I have the original record of Charlotte Sometimes and it’s full frequency (although that was obviously done by Mike Hedges on tape through an API desk). It’s quite dark and mid-rangey, but if there really wasn’t much above 8k it would sound very muffled. CLA produced Black Parade directly into Pro Tools. Apart from anything else, modern track counts are too high for multitrack tape. And then he sub mixed so that he could rig it up to his SSL. I genuinely don’t know of any hit records today that were tracked to tape. The closest I can think of is the Clasp system where you record to tape and then it’s immediately transferred to Pro Tools. I know some LA studios have that and I think Aerosmith used it for an album. I know some of the big studios maintain tape machines but these really don’t get used very much. But more to the point, whatever tape sounds like, it’s is not a key to sounding like the 80s.

  • @cd78
    @cd78 2 месяца назад +3

    Espen Kraft was talking a lot of b@llocks. A computer VST emulation of the Roland Jupiter 8 will never sound like the real hardware.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      Hahaha! That’s not actually the video I’m watching :)

    • @cd78
      @cd78 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp My apologies. He did another silly one this week saying this

    • @LouisTorres-ut4ks
      @LouisTorres-ut4ks 2 месяца назад +1

      Is Espen Kraft like Behringer or Cherry Audio ?

    • @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx
      @RebeccaTurner-ny1xx 2 месяца назад +1

      @@LouisTorres-ut4ks I've got nothing against any of them and I'm not sure why anyone has.