Rhett, can you follow this up with a decalog for us DAW users to have to reflect beforehand, and commit to the take? What boundaries should we keep to replicate this, for the sake of art?
Recorded my first studio session ever in 1987 on one of these. I was 16 and few of us had a rap group back then. We carried a drum machine, a turntable and records on the bus to a studio all the way across town (Baltimore). It took us 2 bus rides, a subway, another bus and a cab to get there. My father came to pick us up because we missed the first bus we needed to get back home. Fun times... EDIT - Now I want one just for the warmth it gave!!!
My father surprised me with a 388 for my 40th birthday. He said, I told you I get you a studio it just took me a little longer than expected. Mine is pristine and even included the original factory manual with hand drawn schematics. Really cool
@@mikeyseviersspookshow5183 My dad said he would buy me a place on the coast, and I can't even see the beach from it, and he never apologized to me for it.
@@mikeyseviersspookshow5183my dad got me me a Tascam 246 portastudio for my birthday when I was like 12. I used it until it couldn’t be repaired anymore. I miss that thing, but a 388 would have been ace!
I still have the one I bought in '87. I wore it out until the recording heads had to be lapped, and again two years later. And then when I needed it a third time in '96, the tech said it was hard to find parts. I was on it all the time. Many VU meters had burned out lights. But I learned SO much.
Love seeing the Moog sound studio. Hooked to my OP-1 Field for the committing of takes. Priceless artistic integrity and imperfection. Good on you, Rhett! Love the pass it on idea too! For the love, baby! Is all about the jams!!
I understant everything about this piece of gear that you described , the adhd hours glued to the phone looking up for what the hell is that machine , the moment you find one and go test it and OMG it sound awesome , the glorious moment you put it in your car trunk ... I wish that mine was free like yours but the seller was a very nice guy and sold it to me at a fair second hand price not giving attention to the hype , he even gave me a month to gather the money whilst people were calling him all day telling they could come fetch it immediately , he really was a nice guy . It is a unique piece of gear that definitely has a color , you like it or you don't . It is the perfect example of "don't fight it , go with the flow'
Rhett, it is so pleasing to see you get this video out there. I feel comfortable again, building music on tape regardless of what has happened to the digital audio space in the last 20-30 years. That tape forces a performance to be real and truthful to the moment. I own a few portastudio’s and they always keep me interested in who is doing things with TASCAM products. Thanks man. PS. There are 138 comments here so far and they are awesome to read.
Memories. I got a brand new one of these sometime in the mid 80's after having used a couple of their 4 track machines before that, which I still have. I was able to open a project studio and I was transitioning from a band to a solo act so I no longer needed the 16 channel mixing console for live work so I put it beside this little beast. Recorded many happy albums with it. I used channel 8 to sync a Yamaha midi recorder and it was heaven. I "moved" up to the ADAT 8 track digital machines within a few years using 3 of them for 24 tracks. Then moved to the ADAT 24 track hard drive, also a beast, but sounded quite good for digital. By the early 2000's I had a computer built that was fast enough to put Sonar to work as my main recording medium using a Yamaha DM2000 automated board and two 24 track Hammerfall lightwire interfaces for 48 tracks of bliss!! Still use that rig to this day and it sounds amazing. Still have the 388 but haven't fired it up in many years now. But so many fond memories!!
I own the TASCAM DP-24SD 24-Track Portastudio and it's such a great piece of kit. Not that I need 24 tracks, but I use it to make my own backing tracks. It's silly, but to record drums, I put a mic on my amp which plays the Beat Buddy drum pedal. I catch it on three mics. Right on the speaker, in the rear of the cab and the room. The unit has it's own mix down and mastering to blend in all three. I also use it for paranormal investigations. All my mics work great to capture EVP's. I basically turn the house I am investigating in to one giant sound stage. Mics, pre-amps, cables...works great.
I love love love my dp24. I use it to record everything and ive even done a fair bit of mixing on it, though I wish it had HPF's; so I still export the tracks to mix. You're set up sounds really unique and cool though; I'm sure micing the amp playing the drum track makes it sound way more organic.
I'm an old Tascam lover from back in the 80s. I still have my PortaOne and my 424. I also did not know about the 388 until just a few years ago. I would have loved to have had this monster back in the mid 80s. I did good demos with the 4trks, but the 388 would have been incredible to have back then. Or even now, like how you're enjoying it. That was so damn nice of RJ, even though there are some problems with it and you'll have to keep up on maintenance, it's a win win for you both. You'll be great friends forever! ✌
When I was young and just starting on my musical journey, I was given Hi Fi gear, speakers, fx pedals etc. I made use of them until I destroyed them or they crapped out. People may think I'm an idiot, I have never sold anything.... I have given away, guitars, pedals, monitor speakers, digital recording systems, patch bays, eq's, compressors, anything to people who are going to use it and benefit from those things. The only thing I never passed on was my Tascam Porta 1.... used it until it died. It was such a fantastic tool which allowed me to experiment, learn, expand , play and generally gave me so many years of creative fulfillment that I can honestly say that it was the one piece of equipment that totally transformed my life.
A local music store in my Hometown had a 388 and a Otari MX5050 to book time it was $9 and hour for the 388 and $12 an hour for the Otari. My band in high school did our first record in the 388 room they had and our second record on the Otari since the Otari room had a Soundcraft mixer and 4 compressors. But we always liked the 388 record the best.
Back in the late 90’s I had a tascam 488. That thing made the best sounding demos. Not as easy to get sound down as ableton but it sounded so good. I’m wanting a 388 after this video.
Bad ass , That’s funny man, I’ve seen that thing in the background on R.js live streams and even made a comment that he should do a show about it. I’d love to see more content like this , thanks Rhett.
I love my 388. I just released a new track, Ruby Tourmaline, recorded entirely on the 388. The 3-band parametric EQ sounds pretty fantastic on these. mid-fi is is a good description of the 388 sound.
@@juanncruzzcruz Hey nice score! The 388 sounds awesome. You can click my handle to hear Ruby Tourmaline, I just put out a diy video for the song. I'm also on the streaming platforms. Cheers
I still keep a Tascam 38 in my studio for adding tape compression. My band 'The On' recorded an entire album on one (with a late-70s Studiomaster 16:8:2 desk), and it took us eighteen months, from Sept92 to March94, bouncing meticulously as we had string and brass sections, choirs, real Steinways and Harpsichords etc, on top of the regular band stuff. People still comment on how great it sounds... blame George Martin, who I'd spent a day with at my uni in Salford, beginning of 1992, looking at the Peppers tapes for a 25th anniversary 'South Bank Show' special doc. Look forward to you developing '8 track mind'.
Just recorded a band to my TASCAM 688 and recorded a live video. 8 tracks, room mic, bass, 2 guitars, fiddle, drums (2 mics), and vocals. Worked like a charm.
This is the definition of the perfect RUclips video to a guy like me. Thanks bro. You have consistently given us amazing videos for years now and you have taught me so much about my hobby I truly have grown as a musician and I have you to thank.
I still occasionally fire up my Fostex 160 4 track I bought in 1988. I loved that thing so much. After over 35 years it’s still the greatest piece of equipment I’ve ever owned.
As these are rare as hens teeth, Tascam still make digital portastudios, and although not that sought after tape sound, the workflow and commitment levels would still be quite similar. A much more pragmatic solution perhaps? Would be good to see a comparison and what you think of them?
I had my first hit Reggae record with a vocal recording that I did on this machine. We moved on to the cassette eight track a year later but I will always hold the Tascam 388 in a special place in my heart. Subbed
Thank you 🙏 for producing this man. A great piece of history and gear. I still have my tascam cassette 4 track machine. Haven’t used it in over 20 years but with a little cleaning and tlc i am certain she still works just fine.
People will become nostalgic for anything, it seems. When they finally cure cancer people will was nostalgic for the good old days. I honestly don't get it.
It’s a different game when all you have are reel based machines. Stereo mixdown to tape with two synchronized Fostex R8s was my set up for years and I still have nightmares 😂
I along with a good friend was gifted a 388, about 14 years ago, by someone who's no longer with us. I've done some special recordings with her --- it's how I learned how to record. I haven't used it in quite a while. This inspires me to get it serviced, go find some reels, and fire her up again. Thanks.
I bought mine new in 87. I used it very heavy until 1998 when I started to try computer recording. I re-recorded over 80 Beatle songs by myself on the 388 over those 11 years. I was in a duo and all my backing tracks were recorded on the 388. I also have a Teac 80-8. I've had the 388 power supply done in 2002. It's still going strong. Great video Thanks.
I love the old, analog, bulletproof Tascam gear. If you did your part, including maintenance, It just worked. Every time. The parametric EQs on their boards were so great. Thanks.
My group, Next Up, recorded a couple of EPs on the Tascam 388 in 1989. We recorded all the tracks at home in our basement studio, and then took the Tascam 388 to a commercial local studio in which we ran the 388 through their set up and recorded the vocals. We loved using the Tascam 388. I inherited the 388 some 30 years later and kept it in a closet only to give it away just a few years ago.
Man, I'm listening to ATL EP right now and I can't describe how incredible it sounds! man, what a beautiful thing that EP is!!! You should have done a Behind the Scenes of that album and the process of recording and producing.
Love this for you Rhett! I'd love to see some "8 track workflow" type videos, from practical things like "how would you record a 4 piece with drums" to "how could we all apply some of the wisdom of having limitations to in the box production"?
Thanks Rhett, I still have mine. bought it in 1985, in Branson mo…..I still get it out from time to time….I like your analogy…yes, decisions, decisions, when recording tracks, but manipulation of the mix, live is worth it to me.,,,I always record a click track on track 8, premix,ping pong tracks as needed, making eq adjustments as needed…..I wrote many a radio commercial on my Tascam……thought of getting rid of it at times, so heavy. but just keep it, clean it, baby it………It truly is an amazing machine, as amazing as it was back in 85……..Keep up the good work, and take care
ugh, I've wanted one of these for SO LONG. Maybe I'm next to find one? I've been writing songs that I'm so excited about and it would be epic to record a whole album a 388... like WOW. Thanks for this vid!!!
If the only thing this machine had given us was the live to tape series it would be a wonderful story but the idea of a machine that goes from one person to another based on what it gives rather than what it costs is just magical. A few weeks ago I killed our car. Drove into some water and somehow the bow wave from a puddle a few inches deep went straight up the front, into the air intake and into the engine. Dead engine. Dead car. But some people helped us out. Looked after us until we got transport home. Even drove us an hour closer to home to make it easier.. Got the replacement car last week and yesterday helped a family with two young kids get their car out of the mud they had embedded themselves into. We were the only people who stopped to help but I felt duty bound. Someone helped us so we passed it on. But I also put a geas (look it up) on the family. They now owe someone else the same help. It's not hard and it makes the world spin a little better for everyone.
This is awesome. You guitar stuff is certainly good, but I didn't realize you've also gotten into bloops. Kudos for the versatility, don't let the haters get to you!
I wanted one of those so bad but the ADAT hit the market just as I could afford one and I decided to go digital. That was back when you could get that size reel to reel tape at music stores and most Radio Shack stores. I keep building my home studio through the 90s and ended up with a Macke 24.8 console and three of the newer silver ADATs. I did 60 songs on that rig so it was worth it.
Awesome... loved your synth jams too... The committing to 8 tracks is a big part of the creativity and decision making... far too easy with endless tracks to just keep on "painting"... back in 1986 I had a 244... loved it for my little synth driven tracks... but it 8 tracks would be way more flexible...
I bought 388 a few years ago I was sooooooo excited. The next day the dude that sold it to me started begging me to sell it back to him. I felt so bad because there was no way I was going to sell it back to him. The main reason was because he already had another one. Anywhoooo they sound amazing. Super cool shit…..
love this video, Love the 388. When I was 15 my dad got me the Tascam PortaOne I used the heck out of it to the point where I wore it out and had to get rid of it, and buy the PortaTwo. That was in 1983-5ish. I have since gotten rid of them but now crave the unit or something like that. I wish I could afford the 388 (they all seem to be available for pick up only on Oregon and well just the east coast) WTH! lol. Anyways thinking of getting the 424MKIII 4 TRACK. And yes it made you a better musician back then, No comping no special digital edits. YOU had to think about what you were going to record and focus on usually one take. I loved it. Rock on!
This was going to be my first 8-track back in the day (I had seen Yngwie's when I went to his house during the demoing phase of "Trilogy"), but alas I went with the 688 - the cassette version that came out later. Still wish I had held out, saved up and bought the 388. Then again, I could get one now if I reeeeaallly wanted I guess. Nice to see this all tuned up and working so good, Rhett!
As a PortaOne Studio owner since 1987, this video makes me smile. Somewhere there are a handful of cassettes that are degraded beyond recognition. I still have the unit, but a drummer i worked with broke it by plugging a power amp into it (I think). Id still like to get it repaired. I also have my dad's TEAC stereo reel-to-reel that needs some TLC, and a box of reel-to-reel tapes id love to hear again. Thanks, Rhett 🙏🏻🤘
I used to have a 388, loved it. I was my big step up from my Tascam 424 PortaStudio. Cut my teeth on that one. Now you just need to get a Quadraverb and a Shultz Rockman and you'll be all set!
Great video! It brought me back to 1995 where I have started learning recording techniques on this Tascam 388. I ended up releasing my 1st CD in 1996 from it. Thank you Rhett.
Rhett, the timeline from RJ to you with all that has gone into creating sounds via the 388 is amazing. I say you need to do a few tracks with you and RJ. That would be to put it bluntly, "badass"
You’re get kinda 80s vibe. The transport went out about a year later. I took a Yamaha M-512 mixer for sidecar for drums and bass. Somewhere I’ve got a box of tapes, a splicing block, and something for degaussing. We had a Tascam 1/2 trk to bounce to. I know you’re gonna have fun.
Such a cool thing to see. Hoping to see a lot more of it on the channel! I had a Tascam 4 track in the 90s and I CANNOT find the damn thing. I’d love to have it back now
Loved this video, your joy and appreciation for this machine is bursting off the screen 😊 And I can so relate to the week long deep dive feeling, although in my case it's usually about different things than gear 😄
When I was a student at Berklee in 1987, I had a friend in the dorms that had one. All of us would go over to his little smelly room, blaze up, and make pure magic (that we never listened to again.) I always wanted one and kinda still do, even with all the digital tools now at our disposal. Just something special about this unit. A big swing at a market that was just emerging and would soon be subsumed by the DAT/DAW revolution just a few years later. Probably the best 'demo' machine ever made. Tape makes you work smarter AND harder.
Wait you got this a year ago?? I’ve got the Tascam 32 (2-Track 15ips Master Recorder) and the Tascam 424 MK2 Portastudio, both were bought because of my love for the 388. Such a magical piece of gear. Wish I could find one!!
Beautiful old machine! I had the 488 MkII and a Zoom2020 patched into the effect send return of the recorder, on the U4-2 patch of the Zoom sounded so lush on electric guitar it was incredible. The old 388 might do well with a visit from a de-gaussing wand ;-)
I have collected about four of these in the last 20 years. Solid, some re-capping work and the spindles and rollers get funky because of the rubber they used.
PLEASE GIVE IT TO ME after your done enjoying it that is LOL My dad used one for years in the late 80s and 90s. He was a DJ and made all of his jingles and commercial works using this board. My dad was my best friends and sadly passed away a couple years ago but I came across a good amount of Tascam 388 reels and Ampex 457. I never got to use one myself but the first one I can afford I will hopefully snag. I went down the same rabbit hole as you. I even feel"somewhat" confident in repairing one as long as it isn't a cracked board :D Since I have been in most of the 388 groups luckily tend to know some good Ol dioxit d5 can bring back some life. Loved the video Rhett but hopefully this doesn't make it harder for us poor 388 lover to get our hands on one
Wow, a not-so-portastudio from Tascam, never saw this one before! Never knew you were a synth person too! I bought a PRS Standard on the strength of your video but I'm much more a synth player Fantastic video
I been involved in recording and production for very long time and never heard of such piece of golden Tascam gear. So so warm sounding. I wish there would be a revival of reel to reel technologies. That noise is an easy fix some OpAmp went bad.
I wonder if besides the tape recorder there's much difference with the Tascam M300 series boards of the same years, where you can use the channels preamp & EQ and send them to your DAW as they have direct out.
Hi dear Rhett! 😃 This is a new side of you i didn't knew about you, that you like to tweak analog synthesizers and this 388 reel to reel,... i only knew you as a awesome and humble guitarplayer,. Love what i hear here, Much respect and love to you dear Rhett🎸❤🙏
I had a 388. It was a game changer in its day: a REAL studio at a price you could at least save up to afford. Produced a lot of songs & recorded my band demos on it. Have to say though, that once DAWs became properly usable I went digital. The convenience of being to jump instantly to any part of the song, plus totally flexible editing is such an improvement. As for the much-vaunted 'warm analog sound'... that's really just limited bandwidth and some saturation: you can reproduce it digitally if you want to. I remember the 388 fondly, but I wouldn't go back.
My guess would be because it still works! All kidding aside... for many of us who grew up with this kind of technology, memories are probably mixed. Yeah they sounded cool, and were great for demos and doing your own indie releases. But lotta moving parts, stuff that wears out and breaks, and the tape tech itself can be frustrating (and sometimes can break your heart when catastrophe strikes, ha). That being said, a great thing to learn about recording (and MIXING), and yeah, pushed drums and bass sound cool on this stuff. And like you say, limited punch in can be good for the soul. Go for it!
In 1988 I was a student at Indiana University and they had an electronic music class that had a 388 as the centerpiece. Along side that was some roland sequencer/sound module with a keyboard controller and an alesis HR16 drum machine. I could get into the room 24/7 when classes weren't in session. It was quite awesome. I recorded a metal band as my final project but I don't really know what happened to it. I don't think it was ever mixed to stereo because the finals were just showing your work by playing it on the tape machine. I enjoyed the recording process but at the time I was very much a guitar player. I had no idea that being a recording engineer was my future job. My first recorder was a Teac 3340S so the 388 was huge leap forward. Cool machine.
Great video! I bought a 388 a couple years ago that was previously owned by Dan & Pat (Black Keys). Evidently they had several of these at one time. I believe many radio hits from the 80s were recorded on the 388, including early work from the Beastie Boys and I /think/ Baby Got Back too. Recording on this is the polar opposite of recording using a DAW, and a refreshing change.
This makes me so happy.
I can’t thank you enough man!
Yeah, thank you both for the insights about how it can improve your .. music
Rhett, can you follow this up with a decalog for us DAW users to have to reflect beforehand, and commit to the take?
What boundaries should we keep to replicate this, for the sake of art?
Hi RJ. This was incredibly generous from you. Cheers
@@PiselliPirelli what's your deal bro?
Rhett has taken the dive off the cliff... Modular synth into tape machine... We will see you in a few years Rhett!
He's Dug too deep! Warn him about the balrog!!!
I like the video. I love that it will become the Free 388.
Recorded my first studio session ever in 1987 on one of these. I was 16 and few of us had a rap group back then. We carried a drum machine, a turntable and records on the bus to a studio all the way across town (Baltimore). It took us 2 bus rides, a subway, another bus and a cab to get there. My father came to pick us up because we missed the first bus we needed to get back home. Fun times...
EDIT - Now I want one just for the warmth it gave!!!
My father surprised me with a 388 for my 40th birthday. He said, I told you I get you a studio it just took me a little longer than expected. Mine is pristine and even included the original factory manual with hand drawn schematics. Really cool
Your dad bought you a studio and then apologised when it didn't happen soon enough? Must be nice.
@@mikeyseviersspookshow5183 My dad said he would buy me a place on the coast, and I can't even see the beach from it, and he never apologized to me for it.
@@mikeyseviersspookshow5183my dad got me me a Tascam 246 portastudio for my birthday when I was like 12. I used it until it couldn’t be repaired anymore. I miss that thing, but a 388 would have been ace!
where do you find dads like that?
I still have the one I bought in '87. I wore it out until the recording heads had to be lapped, and again two years later. And then when I needed it a third time in '96, the tech said it was hard to find parts. I was on it all the time. Many VU meters had burned out lights. But I learned SO much.
Behringer needs to reverse engineer this shit. INSTANT PROFIT
Careful…their stuff is not bad now…and not as cheap…pay attention tech start ups!
Love seeing the Moog sound studio. Hooked to my OP-1 Field for the committing of takes. Priceless artistic integrity and imperfection. Good on you, Rhett!
Love the pass it on idea too! For the love, baby! Is all about the jams!!
I understant everything about this piece of gear that you described , the adhd hours glued to the phone looking up for what the hell is that machine , the moment you find one and go test it and OMG it sound awesome , the glorious moment you put it in your car trunk ... I wish that mine was free like yours but the seller was a very nice guy and sold it to me at a fair second hand price not giving attention to the hype , he even gave me a month to gather the money whilst people were calling him all day telling they could come fetch it immediately , he really was a nice guy .
It is a unique piece of gear that definitely has a color , you like it or you don't .
It is the perfect example of "don't fight it , go with the flow'
Rhett, it is so pleasing to see you get this video out there. I feel comfortable again, building music on tape regardless of what has happened to the digital audio space in the last 20-30 years. That tape forces a performance to be real and truthful to the moment. I own a few portastudio’s and they always keep me interested in who is doing things with TASCAM products. Thanks man. PS. There are 138 comments here so far and they are awesome to read.
Memories. I got a brand new one of these sometime in the mid 80's after having used a couple of their 4 track machines before that, which I still have. I was able to open a project studio and I was transitioning from a band to a solo act so I no longer needed the 16 channel mixing console for live work so I put it beside this little beast. Recorded many happy albums with it. I used channel 8 to sync a Yamaha midi recorder and it was heaven. I "moved" up to the ADAT 8 track digital machines within a few years using 3 of them for 24 tracks. Then moved to the ADAT 24 track hard drive, also a beast, but sounded quite good for digital. By the early 2000's I had a computer built that was fast enough to put Sonar to work as my main recording medium using a Yamaha DM2000 automated board and two 24 track Hammerfall lightwire interfaces for 48 tracks of bliss!! Still use that rig to this day and it sounds amazing. Still have the 388 but haven't fired it up in many years now. But so many fond memories!!
I own the TASCAM DP-24SD 24-Track Portastudio and it's such a great piece of kit. Not that I need 24 tracks, but I use it to make my own backing tracks. It's silly, but to record drums, I put a mic on my amp which plays the Beat Buddy drum pedal. I catch it on three mics. Right on the speaker, in the rear of the cab and the room. The unit has it's own mix down and mastering to blend in all three. I also use it for paranormal investigations. All my mics work great to capture EVP's. I basically turn the house I am investigating in to one giant sound stage. Mics, pre-amps, cables...works great.
I love love love my dp24. I use it to record everything and ive even done a fair bit of mixing on it, though I wish it had HPF's; so I still export the tracks to mix. You're set up sounds really unique and cool though; I'm sure micing the amp playing the drum track makes it sound way more organic.
Sound like a blast man 👍🏾
I'm an old Tascam lover from back in the 80s. I still have my PortaOne and my 424. I also did not know about the 388 until just a few years ago. I would have loved to have had this monster back in the mid 80s. I did good demos with the 4trks, but the 388 would have been incredible to have back then. Or even now, like how you're enjoying it.
That was so damn nice of RJ, even though there are some problems with it and you'll have to keep up on maintenance, it's a win win for you both. You'll be great friends forever! ✌
When I was young and just starting on my musical journey, I was given Hi Fi gear, speakers, fx pedals etc. I made use of them until I destroyed them or they crapped out.
People may think I'm an idiot, I have never sold anything.... I have given away, guitars, pedals, monitor speakers, digital recording systems, patch bays, eq's, compressors, anything to people who are going to use it and benefit from those things.
The only thing I never passed on was my Tascam Porta 1.... used it until it died. It was such a fantastic tool which allowed me to experiment, learn, expand , play and generally gave me so many years of creative fulfillment that I can honestly say that it was the one piece of equipment that totally transformed my life.
Thanks for always taking us down the best rabbit holes. We go ever so willingly and always learn so much.
A local music store in my Hometown had a 388 and a Otari MX5050 to book time it was $9 and hour for the 388 and $12 an hour for the Otari. My band in high school did our first record in the 388 room they had and our second record on the Otari since the Otari room had a Soundcraft mixer and 4 compressors. But we always liked the 388 record the best.
Back in the late 90’s I had a tascam 488. That thing made the best sounding demos. Not as easy to get sound down as ableton but it sounded so good. I’m wanting a 388 after this video.
I had the 488 MkII, I loved the Tascam ticker that went by when you pushed the power button. Made you feel like George Martin or Alan Parson's haha.
Bad ass , That’s funny man, I’ve seen that thing in the background on R.js live streams and even made a comment that he should do a show about it. I’d love to see more content like this , thanks Rhett.
How/where did you learn how to use your 388? - Any help would be great!
I absolutely LOVE the vibe of a good tape machine. This is awesome and what a blessing from RJ 💪.
Yer welcome!
I love my 388. I just released a new track, Ruby Tourmaline, recorded entirely on the 388. The 3-band parametric EQ sounds pretty fantastic on these. mid-fi is is a good description of the 388 sound.
Where can we listen?? Band name?
I bought a 388 a couple months ago for a steal!
@@juanncruzzcruz Hey nice score! The 388 sounds awesome. You can click my handle to hear Ruby Tourmaline, I just put out a diy video for the song. I'm also on the streaming platforms. Cheers
Great video! Would love an updated home studio tour of your bedroom studio!
I still keep a Tascam 38 in my studio for adding tape compression. My band 'The On' recorded an entire album on one (with a late-70s Studiomaster 16:8:2 desk), and it took us eighteen months, from Sept92 to March94, bouncing meticulously as we had string and brass sections, choirs, real Steinways and Harpsichords etc, on top of the regular band stuff. People still comment on how great it sounds... blame George Martin, who I'd spent a day with at my uni in Salford, beginning of 1992, looking at the Peppers tapes for a 25th anniversary 'South Bank Show' special doc. Look forward to you developing '8 track mind'.
Whoa, whoa, THE Sir George Martin?! I'm jealous!
Just recorded a band to my TASCAM 688 and recorded a live video. 8 tracks, room mic, bass, 2 guitars, fiddle, drums (2 mics), and vocals. Worked like a charm.
I recorded songs in the 80s with the 688 tascam I still have my reel-to-reel my cassette tapes Masters I need to find a 688 so I can redo some stuff
Sooo is that dub thing at 3:26 available to hear somewhere? 😁
At the time they were an amazingly useful thing. And they made solid recordings, as long as you didnt try to do too much or overwork the tape.
This is the definition of the perfect RUclips video to a guy like me. Thanks bro. You have consistently given us amazing videos for years now and you have taught me so much about my hobby I truly have grown as a musician and I have you to thank.
I still occasionally fire up my Fostex 160 4 track I bought in 1988. I loved that thing so much. After over 35 years it’s still the greatest piece of equipment I’ve ever owned.
As these are rare as hens teeth, Tascam still make digital portastudios, and although not that sought after tape sound, the workflow and commitment levels would still be quite similar. A much more pragmatic solution perhaps? Would be good to see a comparison and what you think of them?
I had my first hit Reggae record with a vocal recording that I did on this machine. We moved on to the cassette eight track a year later but I will always hold the Tascam 388 in a special place in my heart. Subbed
Thank you 🙏 for producing this man. A great piece of history and gear. I still have my tascam cassette 4 track machine. Haven’t used it in over 20 years but with a little cleaning and tlc i am certain she still works just fine.
Ooooh that warmth! And I love what you are doing with it...And the previous owner was so nice and talented. Thank you Rhett.
Happiest day of my life was getting reels out of my studio. Glad you love it. Back when it was the only option - not so much for me🤘
People will become nostalgic for anything, it seems. When they finally cure cancer people will was nostalgic for the good old days. I honestly don't get it.
It’s a different game when all you have are reel based machines. Stereo mixdown to tape with two synchronized Fostex R8s was my set up for years and I still have nightmares 😂
I along with a good friend was gifted a 388, about 14 years ago, by someone who's no longer with us. I've done some special recordings with her --- it's how I learned how to record. I haven't used it in quite a while. This inspires me to get it serviced, go find some reels, and fire her up again. Thanks.
I bought mine new in 87. I used it very heavy until 1998 when I started to try computer recording. I re-recorded over 80 Beatle songs by myself on the 388 over those 11 years. I was in a duo and all my backing tracks were recorded on the 388. I also have a Teac 80-8. I've had the 388 power supply done in 2002. It's still going strong. Great video Thanks.
I love the old, analog, bulletproof Tascam gear. If you did your part, including maintenance, It just worked. Every time.
The parametric EQs on their boards were so great. Thanks.
My group, Next Up, recorded a couple of EPs on the Tascam 388 in 1989. We recorded all the tracks at home in our basement studio, and then took the Tascam 388 to a commercial local studio in which we ran the 388 through their set up and recorded the vocals. We loved using the Tascam 388. I inherited the 388 some 30 years later and kept it in a closet only to give it away just a few years ago.
Man, I'm listening to ATL EP right now and I can't describe how incredible it sounds! man, what a beautiful thing that EP is!!! You should have done a Behind the Scenes of that album and the process of recording and producing.
Love this for you Rhett! I'd love to see some "8 track workflow" type videos, from practical things like "how would you record a 4 piece with drums" to "how could we all apply some of the wisdom of having limitations to in the box production"?
Thanks Rhett, I still have mine. bought it in 1985, in Branson mo…..I still get it out from time to time….I like your analogy…yes, decisions, decisions, when recording tracks, but manipulation of the mix, live is worth it to me.,,,I always record a click track on track 8, premix,ping pong tracks as needed, making eq adjustments as needed…..I wrote many a radio commercial on my Tascam……thought of getting rid of it at times, so heavy. but just keep it, clean it, baby it………It truly is an amazing machine, as amazing as it was back in 85……..Keep up the good work, and take care
my favorite Rhett Shull video ever. Thank you!
ugh, I've wanted one of these for SO LONG. Maybe I'm next to find one? I've been writing songs that I'm so excited about and it would be epic to record a whole album a 388... like WOW. Thanks for this vid!!!
This video was amazing man. You’re soaking all this up like a sponge. Perfect for your studio and production goals ❤
Wow! I'm totally impressed! i never ever thought I'd see you using the Moog Trifecta! Cool that you got this tape machine.
Passinf the 388 on to the next person. I love that.
I was wondering when we would see some synth content from you! Awesome patch. And Mac De Marco is also awesome.
If the only thing this machine had given us was the live to tape series it would be a wonderful story but the idea of a machine that goes from one person to another based on what it gives rather than what it costs is just magical.
A few weeks ago I killed our car. Drove into some water and somehow the bow wave from a puddle a few inches deep went straight up the front, into the air intake and into the engine. Dead engine. Dead car. But some people helped us out. Looked after us until we got transport home. Even drove us an hour closer to home to make it easier.. Got the replacement car last week and yesterday helped a family with two young kids get their car out of the mud they had embedded themselves into. We were the only people who stopped to help but I felt duty bound. Someone helped us so we passed it on. But I also put a geas (look it up) on the family. They now owe someone else the same help. It's not hard and it makes the world spin a little better for everyone.
This is awesome. You guitar stuff is certainly good, but I didn't realize you've also gotten into bloops. Kudos for the versatility, don't let the haters get to you!
I wanted one of those so bad but the ADAT hit the market just as I could afford one and I decided to go digital. That was back when you could get that size reel to reel tape at music stores and most Radio Shack stores. I keep building my home studio through the 90s and ended up with a Macke 24.8 console and three of the newer silver ADATs. I did 60 songs on that rig so it was worth it.
Can’t wait to see lots of projects on the 388 and see all the process. That’s the real fun
I just listened to the album you linked in your description. Sounds really good and I do like the songs as well. Great video, thanks for sharing!
Wow, very cool gear! And the story too! And the fact that you gonna give it away like RJ did! Awesome! Greetings from Poland :-)
Awesome... loved your synth jams too... The committing to 8 tracks is a big part of the creativity and decision making... far too easy with endless tracks to just keep on "painting"... back in 1986 I had a 244... loved it for my little synth driven tracks... but it 8 tracks would be way more flexible...
Sweet find! @R_Ronquillo, big heart. Good people.
I bought 388 a few years ago I was sooooooo excited. The next day the dude that sold it to me started begging me to sell it back to him. I felt so bad because there was no way I was going to sell it back to him. The main reason was because he already had another one. Anywhoooo they sound amazing. Super cool shit…..
love this video, Love the 388. When I was 15 my dad got me the Tascam PortaOne I used the heck out of it to the point where I wore it out and had to get rid of it, and buy the PortaTwo. That was in 1983-5ish. I have since gotten rid of them but now crave the unit or something like that. I wish I could afford the 388 (they all seem to be available for pick up only on Oregon and well just the east coast) WTH! lol. Anyways thinking of getting the 424MKIII 4 TRACK. And yes it made you a better musician back then, No comping no special digital edits. YOU had to think about what you were going to record and focus on usually one take. I loved it. Rock on!
This was going to be my first 8-track back in the day (I had seen Yngwie's when I went to his house during the demoing phase of "Trilogy"), but alas I went with the 688 - the cassette version that came out later. Still wish I had held out, saved up and bought the 388. Then again, I could get one now if I reeeeaallly wanted I guess. Nice to see this all tuned up and working so good, Rhett!
As a PortaOne Studio owner since 1987, this video makes me smile.
Somewhere there are a handful of cassettes that are degraded beyond recognition.
I still have the unit, but a drummer i worked with broke it by plugging a power amp into it (I think). Id still like to get it repaired.
I also have my dad's TEAC stereo reel-to-reel that needs some TLC, and a box of reel-to-reel tapes id love to hear again.
Thanks, Rhett 🙏🏻🤘
Fantastic. That looks a great piece of kit. I have a few friends that have been recording on portastudios for some years. Happy for you.
Dude this was awesome, really enjoyed seeing the Moog sound studio stuff in addition to the 388.
This video made me happy for Rhett, and pleased he's in my feeds. Some more TLC on this 388 and all is good! What a great piece of kit.
This is fun. Not only is the gear super neat, but there's a story that goes along with it. It's all about the narrative.
I had one of these back in 1986 and loved it. Might have to seek one out and get back to basics.
Amazing piece of kit. An absolute classic.
Why am I suddenly not subscribed?!? The hell, love what your doing man I remember all the tascam gear
Rhett, I’ve said it before. You should be scoring films. Your instrumental pieces are perfect soundtrack material.
I used to have a 388, loved it. I was my big step up from my Tascam 424 PortaStudio. Cut my teeth on that one. Now you just need to get a Quadraverb and a Shultz Rockman and you'll be all set!
the music on this vid was awesome! feeding the 'analog = magic' mythology! great stuff
10:25 I hadn’t thought of the term “percussive maintenance” since my days as a copier tech. Thank you, Rhett.
Great video! It brought me back to 1995 where I have started learning recording techniques on this Tascam 388. I ended up releasing my 1st CD in 1996 from it. Thank you Rhett.
Rhett, the timeline from RJ to you with all that has gone into creating sounds via the 388 is amazing. I say you need to do a few tracks with you and RJ. That would be to put it bluntly, "badass"
I have the tascam 38 but wish i had one of these, sounds great
You’re get kinda 80s vibe. The transport went out about a year later. I took a Yamaha M-512 mixer for sidecar for drums and bass. Somewhere I’ve got a box of tapes, a splicing block, and something for degaussing. We had a Tascam 1/2 trk to bounce to. I know you’re gonna have fun.
Such a cool thing to see. Hoping to see a lot more of it on the channel!
I had a Tascam 4 track in the 90s and I CANNOT find the damn thing. I’d love to have it back now
Loved this video, your joy and appreciation for this machine is bursting off the screen 😊 And I can so relate to the week long deep dive feeling, although in my case it's usually about different things than gear 😄
That's so much fun to watch! THX I used to record on a Tascam 38 (without the mixer) loved the Sound.
When I was a student at Berklee in 1987, I had a friend in the dorms that had one. All of us would go over to his little smelly room, blaze up, and make pure magic (that we never listened to again.) I always wanted one and kinda still do, even with all the digital tools now at our disposal. Just something special about this unit. A big swing at a market that was just emerging and would soon be subsumed by the DAT/DAW revolution just a few years later. Probably the best 'demo' machine ever made. Tape makes you work smarter AND harder.
love the idea! passing along a stewardship! beautiful!
Wait you got this a year ago?? I’ve got the Tascam 32 (2-Track 15ips Master Recorder) and the Tascam 424 MK2 Portastudio, both were bought because of my love for the 388. Such a magical piece of gear. Wish I could find one!!
Beautiful old machine! I had the 488 MkII and a Zoom2020 patched into the effect send return of the recorder, on the U4-2 patch of the Zoom sounded so lush on electric guitar it was incredible.
The old 388 might do well with a visit from a de-gaussing wand ;-)
I have collected about four of these in the last 20 years. Solid, some re-capping work and the spindles and rollers get funky because of the rubber they used.
This is one of my favorite vids you have done! That thing is so cool!
PLEASE GIVE IT TO ME after your done enjoying it that is LOL My dad used one for years in the late 80s and 90s. He was a DJ and made all of his jingles and commercial works using this board. My dad was my best friends and sadly passed away a couple years ago but I came across a good amount of Tascam 388 reels and Ampex 457. I never got to use one myself but the first one I can afford I will hopefully snag. I went down the same rabbit hole as you. I even feel"somewhat" confident in repairing one as long as it isn't a cracked board :D Since I have been in most of the 388 groups luckily tend to know some good Ol dioxit d5 can bring back some life. Loved the video Rhett but hopefully this doesn't make it harder for us poor 388 lover to get our hands on one
One of my favourite vids of yours. Excellent
Nice that you took us along for this journey, Rhett. Good stuff. Make more vids like this. Just sub’ed your second channel
Funny, I have been looking at analog mixers and reel-to-reel tape recorders for a few months now. Did not know a combo device existed… 🤔
Atta boy Rhett, it’s about the music, the vibe. A take that says it well does not need to be perfect.
Dude, love the idea of passing it on for free! Awesome.
Sounds awesome! This video made me miss living in TN, too. Good ol' 40 west. Can't wait to hear what else comes outta that thing Rhett! ✌🤟🤘
Wow, a not-so-portastudio from Tascam, never saw this one before!
Never knew you were a synth person too!
I bought a PRS Standard on the strength of your video but I'm much more a synth player
Fantastic video
I been involved in recording and production for very long time and never heard of such piece of golden Tascam gear. So so warm sounding. I wish there would be a revival of reel to reel technologies. That noise is an easy fix some OpAmp went bad.
Great video. Looking forward to listening to what you do with it!
I wonder if besides the tape recorder there's much difference with the Tascam M300 series boards of the same years, where you can use the channels preamp & EQ and send them to your DAW as they have direct out.
Hi dear Rhett! 😃 This is a new side of you i didn't knew about you, that you like to tweak analog synthesizers and this 388 reel to reel,... i only knew you as a awesome and humble guitarplayer,. Love what i hear here, Much respect and love to you dear Rhett🎸❤🙏
I had a 388. It was a game changer in its day: a REAL studio at a price you could at least save up to afford.
Produced a lot of songs & recorded my band demos on it.
Have to say though, that once DAWs became properly usable I went digital.
The convenience of being to jump instantly to any part of the song, plus totally flexible editing is such an improvement.
As for the much-vaunted 'warm analog sound'... that's really just limited bandwidth and some saturation: you can reproduce it digitally if you want to.
I remember the 388 fondly, but I wouldn't go back.
Absolutely incredible.
I bought one of these in 1988. Loved it. Someday maybe I will have one again.
My guess would be because it still works! All kidding aside... for many of us who grew up with this kind of technology, memories are probably mixed. Yeah they sounded cool, and were great for demos and doing your own indie releases. But lotta moving parts, stuff that wears out and breaks, and the tape tech itself can be frustrating (and sometimes can break your heart when catastrophe strikes, ha). That being said, a great thing to learn about recording (and MIXING), and yeah, pushed drums and bass sound cool on this stuff. And like you say, limited punch in can be good for the soul. Go for it!
I can confirm! Quality in every respect, best piece of gear EVAH
In 1988 I was a student at Indiana University and they had an electronic music class that had a 388 as the centerpiece. Along side that was some roland sequencer/sound module with a keyboard controller and an alesis HR16 drum machine. I could get into the room 24/7 when classes weren't in session. It was quite awesome. I recorded a metal band as my final project but I don't really know what happened to it. I don't think it was ever mixed to stereo because the finals were just showing your work by playing it on the tape machine. I enjoyed the recording process but at the time I was very much a guitar player. I had no idea that being a recording engineer was my future job. My first recorder was a Teac 3340S so the 388 was huge leap forward. Cool machine.
Great video! I bought a 388 a couple years ago that was previously owned by Dan & Pat (Black Keys). Evidently they had several of these at one time. I believe many radio hits from the 80s were recorded on the 388, including early work from the Beastie Boys and I /think/ Baby Got Back too. Recording on this is the polar opposite of recording using a DAW, and a refreshing change.