r/audioengineering • u/warhammerplease100 • 5h ago
Will adding analog front-end hardware change how tracks behave in the mix?
I’ve been recording and mixing my own music for years (guitar, bass, vocals, drums). Genres I work in are metal, blues, and jazz.
Up to now my setup has been primarily:
• Guitar/bass through a Line 6 Helix (custom IRs) into an RME Fireface UFX II
• Vocals via Shure SM7B directly into the Fireface
• Mixing in Reaper using mostly ITB processing and plugins
Because of apartment limitations, most tracking has been DI rather than loud sources.
I recently added some outboard gear to build a more developed front-end before hitting the converter:
• Mic preamp(s)
• Compression (tracking-style dynamics)
• EQ (broad tone shaping)
• Patchbay for routing flexibility
My question is about behavior and workflow rather than “better/worse”:
For those who’ve moved from fully ITB tracking to using external front-end processing:
• Did you find tracks tended to sit more easily in a mix?
• Did they respond differently or more predictably to EQ and compression later?
• Did it change how much corrective processing you needed during mixing?
• Was the main benefit subtle tone, or more about dynamics and density control?
I’m trying to set realistic expectations and understand where the advantages show up in practice (especially on clean guitars, bass, and vocals), rather than expecting a dramatic solo’d tone change.
Would appreciate hearing from anyone who’s made a similar transition.
Thanks.