RME's high-end audio devices are not only belonging to the leading devices in studios all around the world, they also show and prove their reliability even under extreme conditions like this report shows; which has been sent to us from one of the worldwide leading polar research institutes, the AWI (Alfred Wegener Institut).
On March 9th, 2008, Synthax Hong Kong invited to its first Live Recording Seminar: The recording of a classical masterpiece, the St. Matthew Passion of Johann Sebastian Bach (BWV 244, 1727). It was performed by the Hong Kong Chamber Choir and the Hong Kong Soloists.
The composition itself is written for two choirs and two orchestras and has a length of usually almost three hours in the unabridged version. It is, in fact, Bachs most comprehensive work. The Hong Kong Chamber Choir sang the abridged version from Felix Mendelsssohn Bartholdy, which he performed 1829 - more than one hundred years after it had been composed - in Berlin.
Synthax Pro Audio System Consultant and balance engineer Max Holtmann from Germany, joined by members of Hong Kongs professional audio system builders, the broadcast, education and amateurs, led through a demonstration of a multichannel recording system with RME devices.
On this routing plan, MADI-connections are shown in orange, analog lines in black, and ADAT connections in red. Of course, not all of these devices are necessary for a 24 channel recording scenario. The aim was rather to show in how many ways RME devices can be used, and which features they provide.
More information will follow.
Last Update: 3-4-2008 4:40 PM
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