There is a documentary (titled Sound City) about the legendary LA studio, Sound City. It plays on a weird TV station, TBD about every two or three weeks. In Dallas it's over the air station 47.4 but is probably on cable or you can watch over the web. Many great albums were recorded there. Fleetwood Mac, Neal Young, Nirvana, Tom Petty just to name a few. What set the studio apart was a Neve mixing desk to 24 track analog tape. The studio didn't make the transition to digital. The mixing desk was special order when it was made in 73 or 74. Cost new was $75000.
So what makes this Neve Desk sound so good ? Apparently it has lots of transformers. You would expect one on the input or each channel, one to send the signal to the deck, one to receive the signal back from the deck, maybe one on an aux output, one or two interstage transformers. No decent audio chips available when the thing was made so lots of discrete circuitry. Some discussion of the circuitry in this thread and a link to an interview with Mr. Neve: https://www.diyaudio.com/forums/inst...cumentary.html
Dave Grohl who produced and directed the documentary was the drummer in Nirvana, and later started Foo Fighters. He also worked at Tower Records, another documentary on TBD.
So what makes this Neve Desk sound so good ? Apparently it has lots of transformers. You would expect one on the input or each channel, one to send the signal to the deck, one to receive the signal back from the deck, maybe one on an aux output, one or two interstage transformers. No decent audio chips available when the thing was made so lots of discrete circuitry. Some discussion of the circuitry in this thread and a link to an interview with Mr. Neve: https://www.diyaudio.com/forums/inst...cumentary.html
Dave Grohl who produced and directed the documentary was the drummer in Nirvana, and later started Foo Fighters. He also worked at Tower Records, another documentary on TBD.
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