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| quote: | Originally posted by Zild
I don't think it will make anything sound better.
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I will have to respectfully disagree. I do not think there is any dispute that as a producer you can hear whats going on your mix much better on a set of $2,000+ monitors versus a set of $500 monitors. Same goes with an audio interface. If that were the case, why would high end studio's bother spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on top quality gear?
| quote: | Originally posted by Zild
You can do everything in software and run it through an SSL for the final mixdown in a pro studio and it will sound great.
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Nothing could be further from the truth. You can't take a crappy mix/arrangement and run it through some expensive gear and have it magically sound great. This topic has been discussed many times on this forum and others, so I won't get into it again.
| quote: | Originally posted by Zild
I know people who do a lot more than I can with less than I have. |
I'm always interested to hear music produced on less than stellar equipment, because 90% of the stuff being released right now has terrible problems. Are there exceptions? Sure. However, generally you can tell. One of the things I noticed the minute I got high end monitoring was how much garbage there was out there from a mixdown standpoint. Out of control bass, muddy low-mids, harsh highs, the list goes on.
What I have noticed is that the top producers in the field, who are using high end gear, have mixes that sound stellar on both low-end and high end gear. That is a direct result of superior monitoring, because they can hear what is going on with their mixes. In addition, don't forget that good producers don't need a lot of treatment at the mastering stage, its all about getting a good mixdown. As the old saying goes, You can't polish a turd.
People seem to put SO much emphasis on mastering, when, in fact, mastering is a tiny, tiny part of the process. The mixdown, arrangement, sound sculpture and composition is where the magic happens, but sadly, SO many people miss this point. They think they can just take any old track and run it through an SSL console and it'll fix all the problems. That's probably one of the biggest misconceptions in the production world, especially to newbie producers.
As I pointed out in my review thread there is a TON of music being released out there that sounds terrible when played back on good monitors. I can only assume that this is because the producers making the music have sub-standard monitoring.
Anyway, I don't want to start an argument here. I totally understand where you are coming from. I was in your position a few years ago. Hardware synths are certainly a much more fun purchase than monitors and AI. I just got tired of having tons of expensive hardware, but having the final product still sound like garbage because I couldn't hear what was going on with my mixes. High end monitoring and AI solved all that in a heartbeat.
Anyway, good luck, and let us know what you decide to do. All the hardware synths you mentioned are solid choices and I think will serve you better than most modern VA's. I just got a vintage JD-800 and it sounds better than all the other new VA's I used to own. I'm certainly starting to see why people lust after vintage gear because it sounds to damn good! 
Good luck!
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