With a large collection of vintage analogue and digital synths, and using Ableton Live and Cubase software, keyboard player Ken Christian has turned to Focusrite’s RedNet to handle signal transport.
Christian’s setup includes vintage keyboards including a Moog MemoryMoog, Oberheim OB-8, Prophet 5, Yamaha CS70M, Korg MS-10 and a Roland Juno-60, as well as a wide variety of modern synths such as the Yamaha Motif, Korg Kronos, Korg R-3 and Dave Smith Tempest. Before he learned about Focusrite’s RedNet system, his studio was a maze of wires, patchbays and patchcords. Those are headed to eBay, he says, now that he’s discovered RedNet…
‘I have about 40 classic synthesisers, going back to the 1970s – and this was the only way I had to route them,’ he says. ‘It used to be very complicated, and I’d spend as much time routing as creating. Then I got RedNet, and it’s dramatically changed my studio and the way I work.’
RedNet’s Ethernet-networked audio interfaces use Dante Ethernet audio networking. The first availability of IP network audio interfaces for recording studio use, RedNet is suitable for any application that requires moving around high-quality audio with high channel-count and ultra-low latency.
Heading towards his fourth RedNet 3 unit Christian uses the 32-input devices to connect his hardware. The Focusrite AD/DA conversion he’s currently using to get optical into and out of the RedNet 3 are the Liquid Saffire 56, the Octopre MkII and the Octopre MkII Dynamic. All RedNet 3 units feed into a RedNet PCIe card with 128 inputs and outputs via a gigabit Ethernet switch.
RedNet 3 interfaces existing digital audio systems and components to the RedNet network with up to 32 inputs and outputs and full software remote control. The unit includes support for AES, SPDIF and Adat digital audio formats and allows the RedNet system to be synchronised to incoming signal-clock or a word-clock source. RedNet 3 is an elegantly simple means of converting 32 channels of audio and delivering it somewhere else on the network at near-zero latency.
‘I’m going through a number of outboard devices, including my synths and the outboard processing,’ Christian explains. ‘The RedNet 3 units route audio in and out, anywhere I need it, and I don’t have to think about it.’
As simple as RedNet has made his workflow, it has also changed the way his studio looks. ‘I can have a live-recording or work area anywhere in the house I have an Ethernet connection, so it’s really allowed me to expand the boundaries of my studio. I’m ready to buy my fourth RedNet 3, and that will increase my I/O capability to 128. RedNet is so easy, so simple, and so cool.’
More: www.focusrite.com/rednet