Audient Heritage Console Reaches Australian Shores


4th décembre 2017


It was Greg Dixon of Aphek Studio, New South Wales who took delivery of one of the first ASP8024 Heritage Edition consoles to be installed in Australia, describing it  as “an incredibly well built console” which “sounds fantastic.”

 

 

“This comp is awesome. Really open and transparent”

 

 

As with any new studio purchase, Greg was very keen to fire up the 24-channel analogue desk as soon as he could, to see what it was capable of. So, despite being in the throes of overhauling the control room and just before dismantling his old setup, he ran a rough mix of the final song he was working on for a client. “I was wanting to hear the bus comp and particularly Retro Iron circuits, so I ran it through an EFX input and back to ProTools. Retro Iron is great. Subtle as you’d expect, but certainly added a little something,” he says. “The real surprise was the bus comp. I have an SSL clone that is a little better than the plug-in versions, so I wasn’t expecting the Audient to be noticeably different to that. I was wrong. This comp is awesome. Really open and transparent”

 

 

 

 

 

He continues, “I probably shouldn’t have been surprised as I’d already had an idea how transparent it was. I’d plugged the CD player into a pair of channels to listen to some music while working and had Peter Gabriel’s So on. I switched the comp to 10:1 and turned it on. I hadn’t noticed that the threshold was at its lowest setting and wasn’t thinking about the SSL style meters working in reverse to something like an 1176. My first thought was just that the comp didn’t have much output and it wasn’t compressing either, as the meter wasn’t moving and the sound hadn’t changed much. It turns out I had it on the most extreme setting and it didn’t sound bad.”

 

“a great set of preamps/EQ and lots of pre-fade AUX sends for headphone mixes.”

 

 

Since then, Greg has removed all acoustic treatment at Aphek Studios, repainted, replaced the flooring and built some new racks to fit around the desk, which has a built-in patchbay and Dual Layer Control (DLC).

 

 

 

 

 

The Audient wasn’t the only desk in the running, initially. “I’d been considering older, ‘classic’ consoles (which are selling for a fraction of their original prices around here), but there were too many issues with maintenance, heat and other limitations. Audient kept coming up as the best long-term solution for what I was wanting: a great set of preamps/EQ and lots of pre-fade AUX sends for headphone mixes. The addition of the built-in DLC to control the DAW from it is even better.”

 
 

Three months after Greg’s Heritage arrived, the studio renovations are all complete. “My clients have been really happy and like the feeling of sitting behind a large format console,” he says.

 

 

“definite improvement in depth and clarity.”

 

 

“I also had a couple of engineers in who are used to working on an SSL. The studio they’d been using mainly tracked through some vintage Neve 1064preamps and I believe they’ve been at least as happy with the sounds they’ve been able to get through the ASP8024-HE. I know they like that everything works as it should!”

 

 

 

 

 

Even now, the desk still manages to surprise him. “I’ve tried external summing in the past and didn’t feel it was any better than what I was getting with ProTools. I wasn’t sure I’d be running mixes through the individual channels on this desk for analogue summing, but I tried some last week. I’m glad I did, there is definite improvement in depth and clarity.”

 

 

Audient wishes you many more successful sessions with your Heritage, Greg!