
I’m not a professional engineer but I have a passion for recording music. I’ve been recording demos for my own bands and friends’ bands on a shoestring budget for over 15 years, on and off. I’ve been using the smaller Mackie VLZ Pro 1202 since about 2003 mainly for recording to and monitoring Cubase for PC but it has been useful for other applications as well. (It’s a dinky but rugged little mixer that squeezes into a backpack, takes some knocking about and still sounds absolutely amazing.) Lately however I have been doing more live recording, location recording and I am upgrading my home recording setup from spare bedroom to big serious garage conversion and really needed more channels. I needed a mixer that was going to sound really neutral and noise-free with at least 10 respectable mic pre-amps, aux outs for foldback, group channels for drum pre-mixes and 8 direct outputs for recording to my 8-buss Delta soundcard or my Alesis ADAT 8-track recorder (it may be obsolete but it’s
Mackie 1402-VLZ PRO is this a good mixer???
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Tags: Alesis Adat, Amps, Backpack, Buss, Cubase, Delta, Friends, Garage Conversion, Home Recording, Mackie 1202, Mackie Pro, Mackie Vlz, Mixer, Passion, Professional Engineer, Recording Music, Shoestring Budget, Soundcard, Spare Bedroom, Track Recorder






