Why we still record through hardware, even with Kontakt around
A field note on the small, repeatable differences between sampled instruments and the real thing — and why we still keep one channel for hardware.
Kontakt is, in 2026, a perfectly good instrument. The libraries are deep, the scripting is generous, and a session cellist can sit in a track in under a minute. So why do we still leave one stereo pair for hardware?
The non-repeatable difference
The honest answer is fatigue. Hardware drifts. Tubes warm up, the bias moves, and over an hour the same patch becomes a slightly different instrument. We use the drift — it's what makes the second chorus land differently from the first.
Take a single voice, record it 12 times across an hour.
Hardware: small variations you can ride.
Kontakt: identical, always.Where this gets expensive
The honest downside: hardware gets noisy at 3am, and you cannot undo a wrong take at 4am. We keep one hardware channel for the part that needs to feel human. Everything else stays in software, because we still need to sleep.