My latest CD, "Playing
with Angels" is the only studio CD I've ever heard
of where most of the songs were recorded straight to digital.
I just plugged the Korg into the soundcard, opened up Cool
Edit 2000 and pressed record. Most of the songs were recorded
in one take. A few of the recordings have a different, somewhat
older sounding vibe, like "Work All Day". Those
songs were recorded and edited using Music Shop 1.0 on a
Macintosh. They were played through a Yamaha synthesizer.
But they were all mastered digitally to Cool Edit.
Mastering directly
to digital is a brilliant way to eliminate distortion because
there is no tape involved. The song is saved as a WAV file
and dumped straight to CD.
My first two CDs were
recorded on a four-track and then mastered to DAT (Digital
Audio Tapes). The quality is very high on the first CD,
"Differential", because of the care I took in
isolating the live piano and using noise reduction technology.
The second CD, "A Moment in Time" was recorded
to four-track from an electronic piano, so source isolation
was not an issue. However, MIDI was not used because I lacked
the knowledge and funds to use it (but the piano itself
was MIDI compatible). 1998s "Grasp" was totally
MIDI-based, with a combination of three recording techniques
(and that's why it took so long to finish): 1) digitized
music played via MIDI into a real piano with a MIDI controller,
2) digitized music played via MIDI into an electronic piano,
and 3) pure digital music played through a Yahama synthesizer.
You already know that
mastering to digital is the very best way to go. For the
first four CDs, I mastered my CDs to DAT tapes. DAT
technology has been an industry standard for professional
recording artists since the 80s. A CD copied from a DAT
master is exactly identical to the original recording. DAT
recording equipment is more expensive and the resulting
digital file is extremely large, to reflect every nuance
of the original sound source. None of my CDs have any static,
noise, compression, or anything else except the pure music
that was intended for you to hear in the first place.
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