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Tag Archives: CEntrance

CEntrance Updates HiFi-M8 Adding Four Outputs and Bluetooth

The following is a press release issued by CEntrance.
Chicago, IL | December 2020CEntrance has just announced the launch of the updated HiFi-M8, a portable headphone amplifier and D/A converter for audio enthusiasts on the move. The new version of the acclaimed portable device adds Bluetooth support, four headphone outputs, LED VU meters, USB-C, and many other features. The updated device fills an important gap for audiophiles, who like to listen to music with a variety of headphones. HiFi-M8 V2 follows in the footsteps of its predecessor, offering audiophiles a choice of balanced or unbalanced outputs, but takes the expansion a step further. The new product has two balanced and two unbalanced outputs for extra flexibility while jumping between sensitive and hard-to-drive headphone models. 

“Our customers like to compare the sound of different headphones,” said Michael Goodman, CEntrance CEO. “They need a reference device, compatible with their entire headphone collection and offering great sound quality on the move. The new HiFi-M8 is that reference. Paired with a Digital Audio Player or a Smartphone, it is designed to deliver plenty of power and pristine sound quality no matter where you are and which headphones you use.”

Because HiFi-M8 V2 offers simultaneous use of the four outputs at once, it’s easy to compare headphones at a retail store or at home, or to listen to music or watch a movie with a friend, even on an airplane. The device features a digital volume control, offering perfect channel matching all the way down to minimum loudness. HiFi-M8 V2 works with smartphones and tablets running Android and Apple iOS, as well as MacOS and Windows-based computers. It supports all standard sampling rates including 24-bit/44.1kHz up to 32-bit/384kHz, and DSD. An ASIO driver is available for Windows 10. 

The original HiFi-M8, released in 2013, garnered critical acclaim from CNET, HiFi+, Part Time Audiophile, and many other respected publications. Inner Fidelity placed it on its ‘Wall of Fame’ for portable headphone amplifiers. The new model adds balanced Bluetooth connectivity for wireless use, STAMINA mode for longer battery life, and calibrated VU meters for visually comparing differently mastered music. CEntrance engineers worked very hard to offer “pitch-black noise floor” for users of Balanced Armature In-Ear-Monitors (IEM). Some people like to fall asleep while listening to music but nothing is more distracting than background hiss. HiFi-M8 V2 was designed to eliminate audible hiss by using low-noise D/A converters and amplifiers. All of this, combined with the ability to deliver high power for overhead headphones, makes it a flexible, unique portable tool.

HiFi-M8 V2 features eight amplifiers in total, four on the “cool side” designed for IEM use, and four more on the “hot side”, designed to deliver higher power to hard-to-drive headphones. On the cool side it features a 2.5mm balanced output and a 3.5mm unbalanced output. On the hot side, it features a 4-pin XLR balanced output and a ?-inch unbalanced output. Customers using IEMs can engage the STAMINA switch, to disable the “hot side” amps and extend useful battery life to 11 hours. The internal battery can be charged from a USB socket in about four hours.

To help survive the rigors of daily use, the chassis is made of lightweight aluminum. Operation is easy and intuitive, and the recessed controls are kept safe while the product bounces around in a backpack. HiFi-M8 V2 is ideal for active audiophiles who don’t want to compromise sound quality nor flexibility while moving about during their day.

HiFi-M8 V2 is shipping now and retails for $749.99 USD.

The post CEntrance Updates HiFi-M8 Adding Four Outputs and Bluetooth appeared first on The Absolute Sound.

Paul Boutin Barrels Through the Pandemic

 Paul Boutin
Paul Boutin

Hollywood, CA (December 4, 2020)—When Paul Boutin looks back at his career as an engineer, mixer, producer and musician, the word “luck” comes up a lot. “It was a lot of luck,” he says, “a lot of being there at the right time and working with the right people.”

Boutin is being modest; it takes more than luck to occupy the chair next to double-digit Grammy-winning super-producers like Humberto Gatica and Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds. And the people he’s worked with? It’s a long list of multi-platinum-selling artists, many known by just their first names: Michael, Janet, Céline, Barbra, Stevie, Whitney.

Born in France, Boutin—now a Grammy-winner himself—was on course to become a biologist but didn’t make it into the only school on his list. “My mother said, ‘Go and do music; that’s what you’ve always wanted to do.’ I was lucky to be accepted at Berklee College in Boston and started doing songwriting,” he says. “But I wanted something concrete, so I did some arranging and some synthesis, then I went into music production and engineering.”

A friend’s invitation took Boutin to Los Angeles, where he picked up regular work at a couple of studios before Record Plant manager Rose Mann hired him as a runner. “I was lucky enough to become an assistant pretty fast and was put on a lot of good sessions. I worked a lot with Humberto Gatica, including with Céline Dion. He became sort of a father figure,” he says.

A six-month stint working on various Babyface projects led to Boutin’s current long-running gig. “Kenny was building his studio at the time and said, ‘Want to come over?’ That was in ’96—and I’ve been here ever since.”

Grammy-Nominated Engineer Louis Bell Breaks Out

The first song produced at Edmonds’ Brandon’s Way facility was a Grammy-nominated collaboration with Stevie Wonder, “How Come, How Long.” Boutin laughs, “We weren’t sure everything was going to work. There were still carpenters in the studio.”

Brandon’s Way opened with a Euphonix CS2000 desk in one room, later upgraded to a CS3000, with an SSL 4000G+, later replaced by a 9000J, in another. “Since then, we’ve moved to an SSL Duality,” he says.

During the current coronavirus pandemic, Boutin has also been employing more modest technology. On Toni Braxton’s new album, Spell My Name, which he co-produced, there were still some minor vocal changes and fixes to do when it became too risky for the singer, who was diagnosed with lupus in 2008, to visit the studio.

“She’s not technical and she doesn’t have a mic, so I told her, do it on your iPhone—because the iPhone microphone is pretty good,” he says. “I had her record in a closet. I said, ‘Listen to the song so you have the tempo, then sing whatever lines you want. Keep singing them over and over and I’ll pick what’s good.’ I figured out what was the proper EQ to make it sound like what we already had, and it worked.”

The tech went up a notch when Boutin and Edmonds worked remotely with Tori Kelly on her A Tori Kelly Christmas album. “We did all the tracks here and she would sing to them. She has a Logic setup and a Sony C-800G mic. There’s a track, ‘Joy to the World,’ that we made gospely. She’s incredible—she sang the whole song to a click, then we put the music around it.”

Edmonds, who caught COVID-19 in March and quarantined at the studio, has since been focusing on live and pre-recorded social media performances. Boutin employed the CEntrance MixerFace portable audio interface on a number of those videos, including an acoustic “How Come, How Long” Edmonds performed in tribute to George Floyd, whose death in police custody sparked nationwide protests in May.

More recently, Boutin has added videographer to his job titles, beginning with a video of Edmonds’ daughter performing a Billie Eilish cover for a school project. “We shot it on the iPhone 11,” he says.

He and Edmonds followed up with a shoot in the studio and surrounding streets for a children’s charity event. “So now I’m shooting videos and editing in Final Cut Pro,” says Boutin. “We did a whole video in a day and it cost nothing. It’s fun!”

Paul Boutin • www.paulboutinonline.com

CEntrance Debuts PortCaster Recording Tool

CEntrance PortCasterChicago, IL (September 1, 2020)—CEntrance has introduced the PortCaster, a portable digital broadcasting interface for recording podcasts and livestreams to social media platforms, and will be available in three different models.

The handheld device is intended to help podcasters and radio program hosts add music, effects, and either a local or a remote call-in guest to a “talk radio”-style show. The unit includes a Mix-Minus feature to prevent audio feedback for the caller. Remote guests can be on a cell phone or VOIP.

Recording Babyface’s George Floyd Tribute

All PortCaster models can record a remote interview using any cell phone or tablet. The optional 24-bit/48 kHz stereo SD-card recorder offers “One-Button Record” and captures the program locally while simultaneously streaming online. An optional internal, rechargeable battery charges from any USB jack. A pair of built-in boutique mic preamps allow use of up to two microphones or one mic plus a remote guest over the phone.

The updated Jasmine mic preamps feature 48 V Phantom and 65 dB of clean gain. On-board soft-knee, analog, optical limiters for both Host and the Guest can be applied. The stereo Aux 3/4 input allows users to add background music or sound effects from another device.

The unit also includes a Mono Blend control to aid streaming to mono platforms such as Instagram. Designed with live broadcasting in mind, the unit’s tactile analog controls are laid out to be accessed without looking.

PortCaster is compatible with Zoom, Webex, and other audio/video conferencing applications. Likewise, it works with most smartphones and tablets running Android and Apple iOS, as well as MacOS and Windows-based computers.

PortCaster will be available for pre-order in three models soon, starting at $199.99 USD.

CEntrance • www.centrance.com

Recording Babyface’s George Floyd Tribute

New York, NY (June 10, 2020)—Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds recently re-recorded his 1996 Grammy-nominated song, “How Come, How Long,” acoustically for an Instagram video paying tribute to George Floyd, who was killed by police during an arrest in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020.

Grammy award-winning recording engineer Paul Boutin (Whitney Houston, Toni Braxton, Pharrell Williams) used a Shure KSM353/ED microphone and a CEntrance MixerFace portable audio interface to capture Edmonds’ guitar and vocals in one take.

A mobile mixer, recorder and USB audio interface, the handheld MixerFace sports built-in XY microphones, although Boutin opted to employ the Shure bi-directional ribbon microphone instead.

Engineer Paul Boutin used a Shure KSM353/ED mic and CEntrance MixerFace (shown) for the project.
Engineer Paul Boutin used a Shure KSM353/ED mic and CEntrance MixerFace (shown) for the project.

The posted song was a reworking of Edmonds’ Nineties duet with Stevie Wonder, who also co-wrote the track. A Top-10 hit in the U.K., the song went on to be nominated twice for the Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals Grammy Award, first in 1998 for its original version, and then the following year for a live version that appeared on Babyface’s Unplugged album. While the full song deals with a woman who suffers domestic violence, the Instagram version focuses solely on the emotional chorus, adding a new facet to the lyrics.

CEntrance Debuts MixerFace R4B Stereo Recorder

Posted on May 29, 2020, the video has amassed more than 400,000 views at presstime, but the moving clip wasn’t the first time Boutin had put a MixerFace to the test for the artist’s live streams, having just used it days earlier for Babyface’s Waiting to Exhale online event, where the artist/producer broke down various songs on the soundtrack that he produced 25 years ago.

“I used the cute, little MixerFace for Kenny’s Waiting to Exhale music event with guest star Toni Braxton,” said Boutin. “Everything sounded so much better through the MixerFace than all those other ones I tried; it was so very clean. MixerFace is definitely a pro product. I plan to use it on all the upcoming live streams and even Instagram recordings we do straight to video that I engineer for Kenny.”

CEntrance • https://centrance.com

Shure • www.shure.com

 

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