It's August 28, 2025, 03:17:32 PM
In a fact sheet on Tupac from IMDB...Recorded much of his vocals of the "All Eyez On Me" album with a Neumann U87 microphone. In addition, entire album was recorded on analog tape. This was considered somewhat archaic by 1995 recording standards, as much of the recording industry had transitioned to digital recording. (However, it should be noted that Dr. Dre, who produced two songs for the album still uses analog tape to record his music, as of late 2006).Seems like Dre likes to keep somethings the way he's always had them?
Quote from: Rud on January 04, 2007, 11:43:49 AMIn a fact sheet on Tupac from IMDB...Recorded much of his vocals of the "All Eyez On Me" album with a Neumann U87 microphone. In addition, entire album was recorded on analog tape. This was considered somewhat archaic by 1995 recording standards, as much of the recording industry had transitioned to digital recording. (However, it should be noted that Dr. Dre, who produced two songs for the album still uses analog tape to record his music, as of late 2006).Seems like Dre likes to keep somethings the way he's always had them? ^^ I think DJ Quik is very adament about using analog recording methods aswell, I guess it's just something the really good producers do
Aw that's not that unusualI thought I was gonna get something along the lines of Dre likes to hop on a rapper's shoulders as he's recording in the booth and whip him like a race horse after every bar
ole school shit is the way 2 goso they dont do it no mo or somethin thowhat the deal?
Its 2007 and both of them are digital. Listen to Trauma, shit has digital written all over that. Big 2 page article in scratch magazine about DJ quik having to go digital, and not wanting to do it. Many articles on Dre and his Pro Tools setups.