Video
Matt Weiss demonstrates the Milli-Unit in his tutorial on saturation.
Addison Groove talks about using his Milli-Unit for live performance.
Sound Sample Comparisons
Now before you start clicking things, hold on just a darn minute there. You will probably hear a difference even on your laptop or computer speakers if you just click on the samples below. (Depending on your bandwidth, you may experience some buffering issues.)
If you are willing to invest a small amount of time downloading these files (fair warning, they are almost 20MB each) and listing to both of them on your audio machine through your studio monitors, we are confident that you will be pleasantly surprised at the amount of air and punch that can be realized with analog summing. Pay particular attention to the nylon string guitar and to the bass. If you are mixing strictly inside the box on a DAW, you are in for a pleasant surprise using a Unit Audio Summing mixer for your final mix. Samples: This sample stayed in the box for it's whole life. (Very important reminder: If you simply click on the button, the .wav file will launch in your default web audio player and you may hear a slight difference. For an accurate evaluation, right mouse click on a PC or control click on a Mac and save the file to your hard drive) This file is named: inthebox.wav (18.30MB) This is the same sample run through our Milli-Unit analog summing mixer (our least expensive model at $149.00) then through a Standard Sytek-MPX4Aii pre amp for make up gain. We chose this preamp for specifically for it's lack of color to let you accurately hear the difference that analog summing can make. (Very important reminder: If you simply click on the button, the .wav file will launch in your default web audio player and you may hear a slight difference. For an accurate evaluation, right mouse click on a PC or control click on a Mac and save the file to your hard drive) This file is named: summingmillisytek.wav (18.30MB) |
|