Feed your mind. Feast your eyes.
Six things announced at
NAMM 2020
What’s new for Mac and iOS users from Anaheim’s global music tech show
BY ADAM BANKS
1
Evo by Audient Evo 4
This tiny $129 British–made USB–C audio interface gives your
Mac two phantom–powered XLR mic inputs with high–quality
preamps. A Smartgain feature keeps your levels right and
there’s a DI jack too, plus speaker and headphone outputs.
5
SSL 2+
Legendary mixing desk
maker Solid State Logic
reckons its first USB audio
boxes offer sound that’s a cut
above, with a Legacy 4K
mode to add back that
analogue sparkle. The $
2+ is a full production hub
with two preamped XLRs, gain
knobs, level LEDs, and MIDI.
3
Sennheiser HD 25 Light
This newly redesigned
entry–level version of the
classic HD 25 DJ headphones
comes in a lightweight on–
ear format. For under $100,
the closed–back cans have
a simpler headband, 1.5m
cable, and screw–on jack
size adaptor.
4
Mackie CR3–X
Compact monitors are a vital tool for home mixing. These
all–wood cabs with three–inch woofer and 3/4–inch tweeter
promise studio–quality sound in a minimal desktop footprint for
just $100 a pair. If bass is your place, add a CR8S–XBT subwoofer.
6
Arturia Keylab Essential 88
With a full midweight 88–key keyboard, RGB–coded pads,
mod wheels, knobs and faders, this might be the most
impressive $349 you can spend on your home studio. Arturia’s
Analog Lab synth app and the UVI Grand Piano Model D
software instrument are included.
2
Mackie EM–USB
If you want to record or
podcast on your Mac with
a minimum of kit, this $
condenser mic has a built–in
audio interface with gain and
headphone level knobs, and
a mute switch.
Image rights from top left: Audient, Mackie, Sennheiser, Mackie, Solid State Logic, Arturia.
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12 APR 2020 maclife.com