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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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One caveat regarding Richie's advice - he has an irrational fear of faders, especially automated ones.
That means ignore the bit that they are only useful for tracking or live - they happen to be beautiful for mixing.
He is right though on the other stuff; Digital is the way to go if you really want good FX. Sure when you start spending a small fortune on a desk with built in FX (like Harrison or Euphonix consoles) then the FX is great, but otherwise you're better off going digital for FX.
If you want to do traditional engineering FX, like desk mashing or gain distortion, they sure you'll need a physical mixer and honestly anything cheap like a soundcraft or mackie will be fine, but again, you can achive both of these effects with plugs these days.
Oh and tracking refers to recording real instruments or mics.
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Jan-16-2015 00:28
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AlphaStarred
-__---__-_-_-_-----_

Registered: Jul 2002
Location: Brooklyn, NY
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Cheers. Might get a Digitech again, it was pretty good and had 4 ins and outs. Now i'm basically wondering if it's still worth getting the Mackie Profx12 for the extra gain knobs. I don't use a computer, so perhaps it's a good replacement for the Mackie 1202 VLZ, which has only 4 gain knobs. I'm guessing some of the fx couldn't hurt either, if I need anything extra for additional instruments. If I recall, the delay and flanger, for instance, wasn't so bad on the Soundcraft 328, and given Mackie's good reputation, how bad can it be?
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Jan-16-2015 03:58
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xman411
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Oct 2013
Location: Chicago, IL
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How about Roland?
I had mackie Profx12 and the effects were a nice addition. For the price difference, I think it's worth getting it. They sound fairly clean, especially reverbs and delays but you won't get that much manipulation. You might also consider Roland vm3100, which is all digital and it sounds much cleaner and editing goes deep. The mackie is much easier to use, but roland sounds much cleaner, although it will take you more time to master it. I think Yamaha also made a similar mixer that Roland did, you might consider that, too.
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Feb-02-2015 08:33
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