vdubreeze <
vdub...@gmail.com> wrote:
>Conversations about Young and his recent interview about the medium
>have me thinking back to something he did in the early days of digital
>tracking, mostly just to point out to people that he (or his staff)
>didn't start thinking about better quality digital yesterday, but now
>I can't find reference to what I'm thinking about, so maybe someone
>can help me out. I have a strong recollection of an article (RS?
>SPIN?) from the early days of digital tracking (as opposed to just
>transferring or mastering) which focused on a project he was doing at
>his ranch with Crazy Horse where he brought in higher technology than
>was commercially available at the time (again, recreating a memory
>here). It may not have been groundbreaking for recording on the whole
>but it hadn't been done for a major label, major rock recording. But
>I can't remember the particulars, and searches are failing me. 24bt
>instead of 16? Higher than 44.1 during tracking? Some other higher
>definition angle?
Neil Young has done so many crazy things over the years it's hard to
point any one of them in particular. He has never been satisfied with
his sound and often willing to try various crazy technologies.
This is fine, and it's a good thing for musicians to be that way. When
we stop striving for better performance, we're dead.
However, I do blame Mr. Young for having spread an outrageous amount of
pretty bizarre misinformation about technology over the years, and I
often have to explain to customers that just because Neil Young said that
there is stairstepping in waveforms coming out of the DAC does not mean
it actually happens...
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."