I wondered if I such a DI box would make sense in my
recording setup :
bass ---> mixing console ---> soundcard
How useful would it be to insert a DI ?
bass ---> DI --> mixing console ---> soundcard
A guitarist friend of mine has tried to convince me so, but I did not
exactly grasp the whole argument ... I would have thought that the
console already serves as a preamp, but I may miss some point ?
Thanks for advice.
On 8/10/06, Paul Coccoli <pcoccoli(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 8/9/06, Paul Winkler
<pw_lists(a)slinkp.com> wrote:
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 12:37:16PM -0400, Paul
Coccoli wrote:
If I had the money, I'd get a SansAmp Bass
Driver DI. People on
talkbass.com rave about it. You need a mic pre (with headphone jack
in you case) though, as it has an XLR mic output.
OTOH, having been a bassist for about 25 years now,
I can't stand the SansAmp BDDI. It's not a very "neutral" device -
it has a strong personality, it scoops out vast amounts of
midrange no matter what you do with the tone controls.
For my taste, that is totally wrong.
Hmm, I hadn't heard that. I've never actually played one.
Lots of people like it... poor lost souls :)
For going DI, I prefer a decent passive DI followed by
tweaking with plugins if necessary. SC4 is very handy; so is the
10-band EQ
(I forget which suite that comes from). I also
sometimes use
the "tube warmth" or whatever it's called.
I use the DIs in my cheapo M-Audio Audio Buddy. They sound ok to me,
and I like cheap stuff. The CAPS tube amp sims sound ok on bass, but
probably need low-pass filters (or EQ) after them.
I really prefer micing the amp, but I recognize
that's not
always doable.
--
Paul Winkler
http://www.slinkp.com