^^^So what's "high end quality"? Seriously asking. What song have you heard that really takes advantage of the million dollar enviroment.
I can name alot, for instance....Celine Dione "It's all Coming Back". But that's due to the micing of everything. The engineering of the instrumentations boggled me more than her vocals.
But c'mon? Kanye, Wayne, even Jay's newer material? Beats can be made on FL Studio if you know what you're doing, vocals may as well have been recorded on
an AT2020 the way they were squashed all to hell, and once it was ran through a decent board in a mastering house...Wa-La.
Music isn't made the same way anymore. Vocals don't need the best mic especially when they're blended in with the perfectly mic'd digital samples and softsynths we use today. Then you can throw emulation SSL's and Compressors over the top.
Time to get real. You once referenced Justine Timberlake's second album as taking advantage of the same enviroment. I'm sorry, the mix on his first was amazing, but Futuresex while mixed well, falls waaaaaayyyyy short of an album engineers should be impressed by.
Anyone with a computer and even the crappiest mic with the right knowhow can mix an album as good as Notorious B.I.G.'s "Ready to Die" in 2009. 10 years ago, that mix was brilliant. That should say enough in itself.
If we were talking rock band, makes sense. Jazz instrumentalists, of course.
But for a few tracks of vocals? Just sit them well in the mix and keep it moving.
Not trying to argue at all, just fail to understand how as an engineer you don't get that. It would be different if I was talking to an engineer in 1990, but what music released this year took advantage of that million dollar sound?
Times have changed. Even if you did mic up a $10,000 chain, by the time it was pressed to commercial CD of uploaded to iTunes do you think it would make a noticealbe difference? Again, not arguing asking trying to see where you're coming from with all this.