but what exactly is there to do again ?tone-def wrote: total recall is where you can recall a mix you did 6 months ago. if you have to go back to something in analogue you have to do the whole mix again. some people don't mind that but if you started mixing in a DAW it will feel like a waste of time. nothing beats motorized faders on an analogue desk but we're talking serious money. it's a lot of money without motorized faders
i can recall a midi file from 5 years ago, and when i fire it up with the same patches in the synths etc. it sounds exactly like it did 5 years ago, because my desk is permanently set-up with all the instruments in the same channels.
i always set the gains on my desk so that the faders are at 0, which is where you want them for more accurate adjustment. if you are synthesizing your sounds properly, they should require very little EQing, and usually for synth and drum sounds i can EQ an entire mix within about 30 seconds (no exageration)
if your kick always goes into the same channel, it will be EQed for kicks, if your hats go into the same channel, it will be EQ'd for hats, these things require just tiny adjustments from track to track, if you're doing it properly.
most of the knowledge you read about recording relates to recording physical and acoustic instruments, thats totally another story. synthesizers consistantly throw out exactly the same sound from the same patch, so your total recall is done in the synth or drum machine and your midi sequencer etc. itself.
using an analogue desk with in an electronic music context is totally different to recording bands etc.
motorised faders are total overkill in a techno studio, and i just dont experience this waste of time phenomena you're on about mate, its ridiculously easy.