Long ago, I read an article stating that when recording, the further along the signal path you placed time-based effects, the better. The idea was that, using the example of delay, applying delay to the signal right before the recording device would give the best sound, implying that if possible, this would be between the microphone and the board. The article didn't take into account the use of computer-based effects, so I'm sure that changes things, but does this seem right for the most part?
The reason I ask is because when I've recorded at studios and wanted to use a delay pedal, I expected the engineers to suggest changing my usual pedalboard setup. I run my delay pedal after my preamp pedal but before the amp input (single-channel amp w/o effects loop), which is what I do live. They never asked me to change that. The recorded results sound good, but could I expect better results changing the delay placement?
The reason I ask is because when I've recorded at studios and wanted to use a delay pedal, I expected the engineers to suggest changing my usual pedalboard setup. I run my delay pedal after my preamp pedal but before the amp input (single-channel amp w/o effects loop), which is what I do live. They never asked me to change that. The recorded results sound good, but could I expect better results changing the delay placement?
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