| I think so. Although I'm sure you would get better quality with more expensive, or with digital equipment; however, I've had wonderful success with my 414MKII. The trick really comes down to playing with it and trying every feature, over and over and over and over. I found recording guitar and vocals fairly simple. Our vocalist has a 5 octave range as well, and it still sounded good. Keyboards turned out well as well. Drums came out surprisingly well. I tried different micing, and using all 4 tracks, and then bouncing them to one, but you lose some quality in bouncing the tracks. Then I tried sending them through a mixer, and that wasn't bad either. Ultimately, I just wound up with 4 mics through a mixer, and I had great quality on the kick and snare. I was pretty happy with it. The real problem was with bass. What works was sending out a line to the mixer. When I was recording "live" I recorded direct without much problem, even though I don't have a DI. I used a compressor, but that was about it.
I've had several recordings come out surprisingly well, and have received compliments over the quality. It's possible, it just takes work and experimentation.
PS. I recorded some vocals with our singer standing in the shower. Great acoustics. Great for practical jokes opportunities as well. |